tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-90895533704565165312024-03-13T21:24:24.569-07:00Peter ProtheroA Weekly Journal from Jubilee Church's Senior PastorPeter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comBlogger102125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-72484253945254032022012-02-06T09:31:00.000-08:002012-02-06T10:57:46.670-08:00Putting God First Part 3: The Holy SpiritPutting God first requires faith! Jesus challenged His disciples, <span style="font-style:italic;">“Let not your hearts be troubled. You believe in God. Believe in Me also”, John 14.1.</span> Or to use Tom Wright’s words from his new translation, <span style="font-style:italic;">“Trust God – and trust Me too!”</span> Remember the words ‘believe’ and ‘faith’ have exactly the same root word in the Greek. In scripture the words trust and faith are almost synonymous.<br /><br />It’s not enough to say we trust God and have faith in Him. Many faiths make this claim. We have to trust the one God puts His confidence in; the one He has sent to reveal His heart – Jesus, John 1.14, 18; 14.9-10. If we fully trust God we will trust Jesus. But Jesus isn’t here with us the way He was with the disciples He spoke these words to. He is now in Heaven at the right hand of God the Father. So how do we put him first?<br /><br />Jesus made it clear to His disciples, in His final days before the crucifixion, that He was going to leave them, but not abandon them. There is a difference. He promised to send them another helper – the Holy Spirit, John 15.26. <br /><br />The word for ‘another’ in the Greek is helpful because two words exist. One means another of a different kind; the other means another of the same kind. If you own a Ford and exchange it for a BMW, that is ‘another, of a different kind’. But if you exchange your Ford for another Ford that is ‘another, of the same kind’.<br /><br />Jesus has promised us another helper – of the same kind. This is powerful because the Holy Spirit has been given to the church to make the Lordship of Jesus real to us. In Rom 8.9 He is called the <span style="font-style:italic;">‘Spirit of Christ’</span>. Not to have the spirit means we don’t belong to Jesus. The Holy Spirit makes it all real.<br /><br />Jesus made this clear in His conversation with Nicodemus. He had a natural birth and now he needed a spiritual birth – to be born again by the Spirit. Now the Holy Spirit promotes and speaks of Jesus, just as Jesus always spoke and promoted His Father, John 16.13-14.<br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />"When the spirit of truth comes, though, he will guide you in all the truth. He won’t speak on his own account, you see, but he will speak whatever he hears. He will announce to you what’s to come. He will glorify me, because he will take what belongs to me and will announce it to you.”</span><br /><br />The Holy Spirit is here to guide the church and lead the church, by speaking what the head of the church is saying. This is why in two short chapters in Rev 2-3 we have the phrase repeated seven times; <span style="font-style:italic;">“Let him who has an ear hear what the Spirit is saying to the churches”. </span><br /><br />Jesus walks in the midst of the seven lampstands and sees the true state of the churches. But then He sends His angel – His messenger, to speak to each of them. And that message is communicated through the Spirit, for the testimony of Jesus is the Spirit of prophecy, Rev 19.10.<br /><br />Too often we think of guidance in personal terms, of God speaking to us as individuals. This happens. It is appropriate. But the overwhelming push of the New Testament is that God has called out for Himself a people under the New Covenant. They are the people who show forth His praises and who He is leading into His purposes – corporately. So our hearing needs to be a community affair! It’s not so much ‘What is God saying to me?’ as it is, “What is He saying to us – His church in this unique locality?”<br /><br />So for me to put God first in my life means I listen and honour what the Holy Spirit is saying to me as an individual and to the church I am part of. In the book of revelation the seven messages to the seven churches were different. There were patterns of similarity but also clear distinctions. This is important. Each church must be true to the calling and unique expression that Jesus has called it to.<br /><br />This is why there is such an emphasis on being <span style="font-style:italic;">‘led by the Spirit’, Rom 8.14, ‘filled with the Sprit’, Eph 5.18, and ‘walking in the Sprit’, Gal 5.16.</span> We can’t put God first in our lives without His (the Spirit's) help. He makes it real because He empowers to do what God calls us to do.<br /><br />When the Bible speaks in Phil 2.13 of God working in you to will and do of His good pleasure, whom do you think that is referring to? When Paul speaks in Eph 3.17 of Christ (the anointed one) dwelling in your heart through faith how do you think that happens? The key is in the previous verse!<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">That He would grant you… to be strengthened with might through His Spirit in the inner man, Eph 3.16.</span><br /><br />It is all accomplished through the Holy Spirit! In 2Cor 3 we have Paul highlighting the main difference between the two covenants of law and grace. The contrast is between the law that was written on tablets of stone and how grace now allows God, (the Holy Spirit), to write on the human heart. <br /><br />The failure of the law did not lie with the law itself. That is described elsewhere in the New Testament as Holy and good. The real failure lay in us. We are not holy, we are not good. We are broken, tainted by sin. We are not able to do what the law demands of us and so it ends up condemning us; for it highlights our failure.<br /><br />Paul alludes to the time Moses went up the mountain and spent time with God. When he came down his face shone. It radiated. This would happen to Jesus on what is called the mount of transfiguration in Matt 17. So Moses took a veil to hide his face so that the people were not so scared. They were afraid to look at him. <br /><br />They knew that to look at God’s Shekinah glory meant certain death and they were not going to take any chances, even with Moses. But in time this glory faded. Paul uses this to illustrate something about the nature of the two covenants, and specifically to the two ways it is possible to hear the Bible.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">For until this day the same veil remains unlifted in the reading of the Old Testament, because the veil is taken away in Christ, but even to this day, when Moses is read, a veil lies on their heart. Nevertheless when one turns to the Lord, the veil is taken away, 2Cor 3.14-16</span><br /><br />Notice that Paul is referring to the reading of scripture here. The problem doesn’t lie with the scripture but with the person listening. Unless there has been a surrender of ones life to Jesus, a veil lies over the heart. This stops anyone from truly seeing the goal of scripture. Unregenerate people have a veil over their hearts, but that veil is removed when they turn to the Lord. <br /><br />It is relationship that opens the door to understanding. The mistake of the Pharisees was in thinking that life was in the scriptures:<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">You search the scriptures, for in them you think you have eternal life; and these are they which testify of Me. But you are not willing to come to Me that you might have life, John 5.39-40</span><br /><br />The scriptures are important. They point to Jesus. But life is not in the Bible – it’s in Christ and He is a person. He is a living person who calls us into relationship with Himself. Once I have found faith in Him, He opens my understanding to see the real focus of scripture. Look at Luke 24.44-45,<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Then He said to them, “These are the words which I spoke to you while I was still with you, that all things must be fulfilled which were written in the Law of Moses and the Prophets and the Psalms concerning Me.” And He opened their understanding, that they might comprehend the Scriptures.</span><br /><br />Now back to Paul. <span style="font-style:italic;">“Nevertheless when one turns to the Lord, the veil is taken away”, 2Cor 3.16.</span> Look at the next verse. <span style="font-style:italic;">“Now the Lord is the Spirit…”</span> Paul is explicit. The Holy Spirit is Lord just as Jesus is Lord. This is Trinitarian theology and we can’t escape it. The Holy Spirit has been given to establish the Lordship of Jesus in our personal lives and in the church.<br /><br />We cannot claim that Jesus is Lord and that God is first in our life if we are living in a way that grieves or quenches the activity of the Spirit. We must welcome the Spirit and be open to the Spirit. Without His leading, guiding and power in our lives, we will accomplish nothing. To quote Jesus; <span style="font-style:italic;">“For without Me you can do nothing” John 15.5b.</span> And Jesus has given us the Spirit so this verse holds true for Him too.<br /><br />My point is simple. The Holy Spirit is in the business of removing veils, the veil of unbelief, the veil of fear, the veil of shame, the veil of guilt. All these veils can stop us from truly understanding the intent of scripture. We hear in a distorted way through the veil and text looses its transforming power.<br /><br />But where God’s Spirit is active in our lives, there is freedom. His presence brings liberty! Freedom means no veils. This means we can see the glory of the Lord when we hear scripture read. It is in this place that real transformation takes place - from glory to glory.<br /><br />The truth is that we become what we behold. The more we have a revelation of Jesus through scripture, the more we become like Him. The Spirit is given to show Him to us. He effects change in us so that we become more like Him. We find ourselves changed into His image, from glory to glory, by the Spirit of the Lord. This is what grace has made possible. <br /><br />Here are a few questions for you to consider in your journey of transformation.<br />Is there a veil over your heart that stops you believing God can change an area of your life? Can you give a name to that veil? Ask a close friend where they have seen significant progress and change in your life. <br /><br />Now dare to ask them if they have noticed any areas where you are defensive and less open to change. Are you prepared to go on a journey and address these issues? Whom will you allow to be part of that journey so that you have real accountability for your progress?<br /><br />Let me encourage you to invite the Holy Spirit to speak to you through scripture. Tell Him you want Jesus to have the preeminence in every area of your life. Be specific. Invite Him to be Lord in the workplace, in your marriage, in your studies, in your relationships, in your use of time and money. And expect change to happen! <br /><br />Pray through any prompting you get and share it with those journeying with you so that you are not just acting alone. In the mouth of two or three witnesses let every word be established is the Biblical pattern. Allow others to know what you feel God is challenging you to do or change. Their wisdom and encouragement can make a huge difference in any change process.<br /><br />Finally remember that the scripture encourages us to look to God not at ourselves, Heb 12.2. Real and lasting change doesn’t happen by you making a list of all the things you think are wrong with you and then working on it. That’s self-effort. It’s works.<br /><br />It happens by you coming into the presence of God where you are loved and accepted just as you are. And in that place God is able to highlight any area of your life He wants to deal with. This way you are allowing the grace of God to change you and not falling into a self-help program. Listen to James on this:<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Draw near to God and He will draw near to you. Cleanse your hands you sinners and purify your hearts you double minded, James 4.8</span><br /><br />Notice that. We take the first move. We draw near to God, and then He draws near. He watches to see if our desire is there. Once we draw near He draws near. In His presence we get convicted. That is the time to then cleanse our hands – the things we have done wrong.<br /><br />Many people get this wrong. They try and get clean before coming into God’s presence and often end up staying away from fellowship. Yet the Bible says it’s being in His presence that shows us our need for cleansing. That’s grace. That’s what the Holy Spirit does. And in that place of repentance and humility comes cleansing and forgiveness so that we leave changed and free; free to pursue a life of being led and filled with the Spirit.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-43557245256665596482012-01-31T03:45:00.000-08:002012-01-31T04:01:10.950-08:00Putting God First Part 2: The Centrality of JesusMany religious people claim to put God first in their life. I don’t doubt their sincerity. But scripture is explicit that to put God first means we put Jesus first. Let me explain. Jesus defined eternal life as this:<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">That they may know You, the only true God and Jesus Christ whom You have sent, John 17.3</span><br /><br />Knowing God implies that we receive whom God has sent. In fact how we respond to Jesus becomes the acid test of how well we truly know God. The Pharisees claimed to follow God yet they rejected Jesus. Such actions betrayed the true condition of their hearts. Listen to Jesus on the subject:<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">And the Father Himself, who sent Me, has testified of Me. You have neither heard His voice at any time, nor seen His form. But you do not have His word abiding in you, because whom He sent, Him you do not believe, John 5.37-38.</span><br /><br />This is an amazing indictment. You haven’t heard Him or seen Him, <span style="font-style:italic;">“at any time”</span>. These were the men society looked to as spiritual leaders in Israel. They were the ‘Let’s put God first’ elite – but they missed Jesus. They prided themselves in being above the average Joe when it came to religious commitment. But religious zeal is not the same as putting God first.<br /><br />Consider Paul before his conversion. He persecuted Christians; all in the name of religious zeal. He thought he was serving God. But then he met Jesus on the Damascus road and it shook him to the core. Later he described himself as a blasphemer and an insolent man! He realized he had suffered from spiritual blindness. God had to open his eyes to the reality of Jesus.<br /><br />To put God first must mean we begin to align our hearts affections with His. We learn to love what He loves and value what He values. And He loves and values His son, Jesus. In Matt 17 we have the record of the transfiguration on the Mount. The story is well known. When Peter comes up with the great suggestion of building booths for Moses, Elijah and Jesus a bright cloud overshadows them all and God speaks, <span style="font-style:italic;">“This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased – Hear Him”, Matt 17.5.</span><br /><br />The affirmation present at the beginning of Jesus ministry is repeated here with one notable addition – ‘listen to my Son, hear what He has to say’. The Father is pointing people to Jesus! What Peter had to say was not important. It added nothing to the moment. They needed to listen to Jesus. The apostolic writers of the NT understood this. <br /><br />John is perhaps the clearest of all the gospel writers. He is unequivocal.<br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />In the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through Him and without Him nothing was made that was made, ……and the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, John 1.1-3,14.</span><br /><br />Wow. Jesus is God. He created everything! Scriptures like this push our understanding of the nature of the Godhead. We are lead to see that God is a community of Father, Son and Holy Spirit. And Jesus was aware of this. Listen to His language in John 17.5 <br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />“And now O Father, glorify Me together with Yourself, with the glory which I had with You before the world was”.</span><br /><br />Jesus knew He predated creation, sharing in the glory of the Father and He looked forward to experiencing it again! <br /><br />In the book of Revelation John has a vision. He sees heaven, a throne, creatures surrounding the throne. But then at the heart of it all he sees the Lamb – the center of heavens worship. It’s Jesus, Rev 5.6-14.<br /><br />This is why Paul was so adamant that the church recognizes the exaltation and supremacy of Jesus. Look at Col1.12-20.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">……… Giving thanks to the Father who has qualified us to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in the light. He has delivered us from the power of darkness and conveyed us into the kingdom of the Son of His love, in whom we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins. <br /><br />He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. For by Him all things were created that are in heaven and that are on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or powers. All things were created through Him and for Him. And He is before all things, and in Him all things consist. And He is the head of the body, the church, who is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in all things He may have the pre-eminence.<br /> <br />For it pleased the Father that in Him all the fullness should dwell, and by Him to reconcile all things to Himself, by Him, whether things on earth or things in heaven, having made peace through the blood of His cross.</span><br /><br />These are amazing verses. Creation is focused on Jesus. He alone has fulfilled the plan of God and has now been exalted to the highest place of honour. Heaven affords Him that place and God wants earth to do the same. That’s why we are here.<br /><br />By honouring Jesus as the head of the church we are confessing His supremacy over all things. The church is a model of what it is like to live under the reign of Jesus. This is our witness to the world that will attract many to Him. Not only that; Jesus is ‘the firstborn from the dead’. That means He is the prototype of the New Creation man. <br /><br />In Jesus, the future has invaded the present. The new creation has broken in even as the old creation is passing away. And like the creation recorded in Genesis there is an order; the main difference being that in the new creation this order is reversed. <br /><br />So just as Adam was made on the last day and is the crown of the old creation; Jesus has become the ‘firstborn’. The new creation begins with Him and it is the universe itself that is last to be renewed. In fact Paul says the old creation is groaning in birth pangs waiting for the new creation to finally come in fullness, Rom 8.19-22.<br /><br />So Jesus is at the heart of everything. Not only that, He is at the heart of scripture.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">You search the Scriptures, for in them you think you have eternal life; and these are they which testify of Me. But you are not willing to come to Me that you may have life. I do not receive honour from men. But I know you, that you do not have the love of God in you. I have come in My Father’s name, and you do not receive Me; if another comes in his own name, him you will receive. How can you believe, who receive honour from one another, and do not seek the honour that comes from the only God? Do not think that I shall accuse you to the Father; there is one who accuses you—Moses, in whom you trust. For if you believed Moses, you would believe Me; for he wrote about Me. But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe My words? John 5.39-47.</span><br /><br />This is Jesus speaking. Notice what He is claiming. The scriptures <span style="font-style:italic;">‘testify of Me’</span>; Moses <span style="font-style:italic;">‘wrote about Me’</span>. Not only that, He places His words on a par with Moses writings. This is audacious language; language that continues even after the resurrection, as Jesus opens up the scriptures to His disciples.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">And beginning at Moses and all the Prophets, He expounded to them in all the Scriptures the things concerning Himself, Luke 24.27.</span><br /><br />This is why the Bible is so important. Yes you can read it and miss Jesus. But once you know Him, it becomes a treasure chest showing us more of Him. <br /><br />Jesus gives us a clue as to why His detractors in John 5 would not hear Him. They wanted the honour of men, not the honour that comes from God. This speaks to their basic motivation. They were out to impress men, not God. This is pride, pure and simple. It blinds us to truth. It blinds us to Jesus. It deafens us so that we don’t hear Him.<br /><br />So whilst it is true that we can read the Bible and hear it preached and miss Jesus, it’s equally true that we can’t know the fullness of who He is and all that He has planned for us as His people without it! So we have got to learn to handle it in the right way.<br /><br />Thus, putting Jesus first means we have to approach life and truth with a desire to please God; to have His approval. This is how we enter the Kingdom, through humble repentance. It becomes the pattern for how we are to engage with Biblical truth. We must be more concerned with doing it than just knowing it! James 1.22. We must allow it to shape us and change us.<br /><br />Now there is a danger here. Over the years I have met countless numbers of believers (and heretics) who claim to be Biblical in their beliefs and practice. Mormons claim to be Biblical by having more than one wife citing, Abraham, Jacob, Moses and David as their examples – all great men, godly men.<br /><br />I know believers who justify lying if it is to protect people, quoting the story of Rahab who lied to protect the Israelite spies from the Jericho soldiers. After all she is called a woman of faith!! But is that really Biblical?<br /><br />I know leaders who teach that believers should never question or challenge leaders. They use the passage from Numbers 12 where Miriam spoke out against Moses for marrying an Ethiopian. God struck her with leprosy and only through Moses intercession was this commuted to a weeklong condition. The passage is used to put fear into people - and I don’t mean the fear of the Lord. Is that really Biblical?<br /><br />I grew up in a time when saying you were a Christian became inadequate because Britain had become culturally Christian. So we added the phrase, a ‘born again’ Christian, (which if you think about it is funny. Is there any other kind?). It was our attempt to deal with a nation of people that thought being British made you a Christian.<br /><br />Later we added, ‘Spirit filled’, ‘born again’ Christian to distinguish those who believed in the Baptism of the Spirit from evangelicals who thought that anything vaguely Pentecostal was, at best whacky and at worst demonic. <br /><br />I remember people asking me; ‘Are you a Christian?’ Yes! But are you a born-again Christian? Yes! ‘But are you a Spirit-filled, born-again Christian? At which point I wanted to reply, ‘Listen, I’m a Spirit-filled, born-again, washed in the blood with my name written in Heaven, waiting for the return of Jesus, Christian! Is that good enough?’ (I never did have the courage to say it, but I did think it!)<br /><br />So often our attempts at being Biblical are secretly a way of testing who’s up to speed with our understanding of truth. We use this approach to create insiders and outsiders. We use it push our agenda and get things done. It’s often a subtle form of manipulation.<br /><br />I find it helpful to step back a little and try to understand what kind of lens are we using when we come to the Bible. I focus on two things; the person and work of Jesus. In other words I try and view scripture through the new covenant. This changes the question from, ‘Is it Biblical?’ to ‘Is it Biblical in the light of the New Covenant?’ a covenant that was established through the person and work of Jesus.<br /><br />Much theology doesn’t stand up under that kind of approach. The saints in the past may have had more than one wife but in the light of the new covenant they fell short of God’s ideal. People may have been stoned to death for adultery in the past, but again in the light of the new covenant we rebuke and forgive. Miriam may have been made leprous in the wilderness story, but perhaps the issue was that she didn’t challenge Moses personally, but complained to Aaron, violating the Matt 18 principle of dealing with issues privately and personally.<br /><br />Remember James and John when the Samaritan village rejected Jesus in Luke 9.51-56. They recommended genocide and quoted Elijah, who called down fire from heaven. They wanted to be Biblical! They thought they were being Biblical! But Jesus rebuked them and said they had the wrong spirit. It wasn’t new covenant. It did not represent God’s heart.<br /><br />So being Biblical is more than just knowing that something was taught or practiced in the Bible. It’s seeing that it fits with who Jesus is and what He has done. It’s more than having a verse or example to quote to justify an attitude, practice or belief; it is daring to ask if the attitude, practice or belief truly fits in with the new covenant of grace.<br /><br />Let me encourage you to put Jesus first. To place Him where scripture does, as head of all things. Then come with an attitude of humility to scripture, being willing to do what it says. Finally seek to understand the Bible in the light of who Jesus is and what He has done. Next time I’ll show you the vital importance of the Holy Spirit in helping us to do this.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-61284166243263347762012-01-21T06:07:00.000-08:002012-01-25T20:32:10.948-08:00Putting God First Part 1: Establishing an Altar<span style="font-style:italic;">Gen 13.1-4<br />Then Abram went up from Egypt, he and his wife and all that he had, and Lot with him, to the South. Abram was very rich in livestock, in silver, and in gold. And he went on his journey from the South as far as Bethel, to the place where his tent had been at the beginning, between Bethel and Ai, to the place of the altar, which he had made there at first. And there Abram called on the name of the LORD.</span><br /><br />This text is very suggestive. It comes on the back of Abram’s journey into Egypt. He went there because he was scared. There was a famine in Canaan. God had called him to inherit this land but now things were difficult, so he left for Egypt. Here he lied about Sarai, calling her his sister, instead of his wife (a half truth). Finally he returned to Canaan. But the text seems to suggest that his return was not just geographic, it was spiritual.<br /><br />He came back to the altar he had made at first; to the place where his tent had been at the beginning. Finally, in that place, ‘Abram called on the name of the LORD. We know from Rom 10.13 that <span style="font-style:italic;">all those who call on the name of the Lord will be saved</span>, (delivered, healed, kept safe). We also know that it was during the time of Seth’s son, Enosh in Gen 4.26, that men ‘began to call on the name of the Lord’.<br /><br />In other words there was an entire generation where God was left out of the frame. People lived life without God as their reference point. But then Seth had a son and it all changed. One man can make a huge difference! Men began to call upon the Name of the Lord. They wanted His involvement in their lives. They wanted, healing, deliverance, salvation.<br /><br />A generation passed were people forgot to involve God but then Enosh and his generation changed all that. Perhaps they saw the consequences of a generation that forgot about God. Perhaps they were inspired by stories from Adam about what it was like to walk with God, (Adam would have been alive at that time). Whatever the reason they called on the name of the Lord.<br /><br />And that’s what Abram did. He called on God again as he had done in the beginning. He re-established fellowship with God. He drew near to God and God drew near to him. And in that place of fellowship God revealed more of His plan to Abram.<br /><br />The reality is that we are wired for fellowship. In Gen 3.8 the Lord walked in the garden in the cool of the day. He and Adam had fellowship. They talked. They engaged together in the naming of the animals. Yet that partnership was incomplete. Adam was alone. So God made Eve, taking part of Adam to create a complementary partner. He extended Adam’s capacity for fellowship.<br /><br />1John 1.3 says: <span style="font-style:italic;">that which we have seen and heard we declare to you, that you also may have fellowship with us; and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ.</span><br /><br />Notice that. We are wired for fellowship with each other, God’s people and with God the Father and His Son Jesus Christ. Yet life shows us how difficult it is to get on with other people. It is a testament to the reality of the fall. Sin has left its mark in us and in creation. It’s all out of whack! <br /><br />Just like Adam who disobeyed God by eating the forbidden fruit, so we too are left wanting to hide, self-conscious, guilty, afraid and wanting to blame others. No wonder we talk about dysfunctional relationships, dysfunctional families and dysfunctional organisations.<br /><br />Yet there is good news. Jesus died to restore our fellowship to God and each other that was broken by sin. Eph 2.19-20 says:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />Now, therefore, you are no longer strangers and foreigners, but fellow citizens with the saints and members of the household of God, having been built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief cornerstone.</span><br /><br />The human spirit is made alive through the new birth. We can be reconnected to God and that ensures we can connect to each other. The lines are open! But we are talking about a relationship. It’s not automatic. All relationships need to be cultivated, nurtured, time taken to invest in them. And none is more important than our relationship with God.<br /><br />Let’s go back to Abram. He came back to the altar he had made at the beginning; the place where he met with God. He was in fact restoring spiritual priorities. He was putting God first. He was seeking fellowship again. The beauty of fellowship with God is that when we give Him devotion He often gives us direction!<br /><br />God doesn’t want our lives to be directed by fear (of a famine), or guilt, failure, shame or insecurity. He wants to speak words of promise that inspire us to live by faith, trusting in Him. That’s what He did for Abram.<br /><br />Every believer needs an altar; a place where they meet with God; a place where they invite His intervention in their life; a place where they can worship and pray. This is what the new birth does. It establishes an altar; a place where we can commune with God. <br /><br />As I was growing up this was called a ‘Quiet Time’. Today it’s often called having a ‘Devotional’. The label is not important, but establishing a regular time with God is. Jesus did this. The gospel of Mark tells us that a great while before dawn Jesus withdrew to a deserted place and there He prayed, Mark 1.35.<br /><br />In the midst of a busy ministry schedule Jesus took time to talk and listen to His Father. It kept Him focused on God’s priorities rather than the demands of ministry. Notice from Mark 1.38 that Jesus knew He needed to move on to other cities. The demands of ministry remained. Everyone was looking for Him, but He moved on to other cities in obedience to the Father.<br /><br />This became His pattern right up until His final anguish in the Garden of Gethsemane, Luke 5.16; 22.39-44. But even here scripture tells us that the garden was a regular place for Him to visit when in Jerusalem. Like all the other places He withdrew to, it was a place where He had established an altar. <br /><br />There He found strength - Luke 22.43, direction – Mark 1.35, insight – Luke 22.31 and there He prayed for those He loved – John 17. We are naive to think we can do well as believers and not take time to establish an altar. Jesus did it. He withdrew. And He taught us to do the same. <br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />And when you pray, you shall not be like the hypocrites. For they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the corners of the streets, that they may be seen by men. Assuredly, I say to you, they have their reward. But you, when you pray, go into your room, and when you have shut your door, pray to your Father who is in the secret place; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you openly, Matt 6.5-6.</span><br /><br />Notice that. We have to shut the door on the world if we are to spend time with the Father. We must withdraw in order to be refreshed. In the OT it took time to build an altar. The rocks could not be shaped with a human instrument. They had to be found and put together.<br /><br />I have a Jewish friend. He told me that the Rabbi’s believe that this prescription was given for two reasons. The first was that no human effort could be used for shaping the altar where we meet with God. The temptation to take pride in what we have built is ever present.<br /><br />But secondly the fact that the stones had to fit together to some degree meant that the builder was very purposeful in choosing rocks that had a good fit. It therefore took time and they couldn’t rush the process. I like that. Experience tells me it takes time to find a place where there are no distractions. <br /><br />John Wesley had a special room in his house. I’ve seen it. The room has a window that overlooks a beautiful garden. In the room is a chair, one that Wesley designed himself. It had a small shelf on the back. There he sat in reverse so he could rest his Bible on the small shelf and read it. Nothing else was in the room; just an empty room with a chair and a Bible. He called it the powerhouse.<br /><br />All the great men of the Bible and history spent time with God. They knew that this was the true source of their success in ministry. They valued it. They cultivated it. They modelled it to their disciples. <br /><br />Where are you able to pray and read God’s word without distractions? Jesus spent most of His time outside in places where it was hard to find people and hard for people to find Him. He removed Himself from the demands of ministry and ministered to God instead. <br /><br />When you find that place, establish a regular time for going there. People are different. Some do it very early while others do it very late. Daniel did it three times a day! What works for you? <br /><br />This is not to take away from the spontaneous nature of prayer that can happen anywhere, at any time. Rather it is to have a daily point of reference for meeting with God where you take time to listen to Him. Without this altar, putting God first remains little more than rhetoric.<br /><br />And the beauty of Abraham’s story is that you can always return to an altar. It remains. Starting over again is always a genuine possibility. In fact Abraham’s life is characterised by the fact that every time he moved to a new place he built an altar. He wanted to put God first in every step of his journey. Let me encourage you to do the same!Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-60832862827281016562011-12-29T10:24:00.000-08:002011-12-29T11:01:16.090-08:00Joyful Living - a sign of Godly Character<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-iLT3aTcpfHE/Tvy2mxM9rfI/AAAAAAAAASk/p6sGq4g2nzc/s1600/Joyful%2B1.jpeg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 259px; height: 194px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-iLT3aTcpfHE/Tvy2mxM9rfI/AAAAAAAAASk/p6sGq4g2nzc/s320/Joyful%2B1.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5691624806248459762" /></a><br />Tom Wright has done a new translation. It’s called the New Testament for everyone. Take a look at these familiar scriptures from his fresh perspective.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">The result is this: since we have been declared ‘in the right’ on the basis of faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus the Messiah. Through him we have been allowed to approach, by faith, into this grace in which we stand; and we celebrate the hope of the glory of God. That’s not all. We also celebrate in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces patience, patience produces a well-formed character, and a character like that produces hope. Hope in its turn, does not make us ashamed, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts thorough the Holy Spirit who has been given to us. Rom 5.3-5</span><br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">My dear family, when you find yourselves tumbling into various trials and tribulations, learn to look at it with complete joy, because you know that, when your faith is put to the test, what comes out is patience. James 1.2-3</span><br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />I’m speaking the truth in the Messiah, I’m not lying. I call my conscience as witness, in the Holy Spirit, that I have great sorrow and endless pain in my heart. Left to my own self, I am half inclined to pray that I would be accursed, cut off from the Messiah, on behalf of my family, my own flesh and blood relatives. Rom 9.1-3</span><br /><br />There is no doubt in my mind that Joy is both a means and a goal in expressing Godly character. It is second in the list of the fruit of the Spirit in Gal 5.22. Thus it is intrinsically part of the character of God. He is a joyful God. The Old prophet Zephaniah said that God would <span style="font-style:italic;">‘joy over us with singing’, Zeph 3.10.</span>.<br /><br />The apostolic writers were clear that joy was a means of developing character. Paul said he gloried or to use Wright’s translation he <span style="font-style:italic;">‘celebrated’</span> tribulations. This was because he understood that something was going on through the process of every trial. Each trial was designed to produce perseverance in us and this helped to create, <span style="font-style:italic;">‘well formed character’</span>. <br /><br />This in turn led to a genuine hope in God that did not lead to disappointment. Rather it led to largeness of heart because of the Holy Spirit poured out into our hearts. The danger with every trial is to react in the wrong way; to become bitter, angry, disappointed. So James agrees with Paul, <span style="font-style:italic;">‘Count it all joy when you stumble into various trials’.</span><br /><br />Like Paul, James knew that something precious or of value was happening in this process. It was producing patience so that we could be <span style="font-style:italic;">‘complete and lack nothing’</span>. Wow. What a goal. God is in the business of forming and shaping us so that we are ready for anything He has for us.<br /><br />Now the danger with any teaching on joy is that we bury or ignore our times of sorrow. Sorrow, like joy is a powerful emotion. It is a natural part of life and often precedes real joy. Jesus spoke of the woman who travails in birth pains but then forgets her sorrow because of the joy of giving birth, John 16.21. As the Psalmist put it, <span style="font-style:italic;">‘weeping endures for a night, but joy comes in the morning’</span>, Psalm 30.5.<br /><br />In Rom 9 Paul speaks of his continual sorrow of heart for the nation of Israel. He is emphatic. Three times he emphasizes that this is how he truly feels. This is from the same man who penned, <span style="font-style:italic;">‘rejoice in the Lord always and again I say rejoice’, Phil 4.6.</span> The one who celebrated, ‘tribulations’. What is going on?<br /><br />The truth is that many of us, like Paul, carry a secret sorrow. A loved one who is not yet saved; a son or daughter who is no longer walking with God; a yearning for pregnancy after so many miscarriages; a desire for healing, but carrying pain; a longing to provide well for your family but facing unemployment. All these are genuine sorrows.<br /><br />And just to remind us, Jesus felt sorrow – even to the point of death, Mark 14.34. But neither Jesus nor any of the apostles allowed themselves to be overwhelmed with sorrow. Rather they chose to rejoice and exalt the greatness of God even in their time of sorrow and pain.<br /><br />We see this a lot in the Psalms. In Psalm 50.23 God speaks to His people and says; <span style="font-style:italic;">“Whoever offers praise glorifies me and to him who orders his conduct (Literally, Journey in the Hebrew) aright, I will show the salvation of God”.</span><br /><br />To praise God is to glorify Him. It is in effect saying, through our worship, that He is bigger than our problems. This kind of response positions our hearts to be able to discern the right road to take. We are all on a journey but we are not all on the right road; we are not all heading in the right direction. <br /><br />Joyful praise has a way of impacting our conduct. We don’t react the way others do to disappointment or trials. Rather we seek to cooperate with God to bring about His purpose, even in the midst of distress and pain. This is the journey of seeking the Kingdom first. It’s the journey of faith. We believe that things will be different.<br /><br />I have a friend who has conducted hundreds if not thousands of funerals. He has covered the full gambit from the young to the old; those who have died through natural causes to those who have died violently or through suicide. He has done memorials for believers and unbelievers alike. <br /><br />What is fascinating to me is that in the twenty something years he has been providing this service he claims that in his experience there is no discernable difference to the way believers and unbelievers react to grief. This is tragic. Paul is explicit. We don’t grieve the way the world grieves. We have hope, 1 Thess 4.13. The resurrection makes a difference for us - today! The resurrection is God's vindication that He can bring life out of death. Death can give way to a new creation!<br /><br />Weeping is an appropriate response to grief but remember, joy comes in the morning, Psalm 30.5. In other words we should expect to pass through the grief and come to a place of genuine heartfelt rejoicing. Neh 8,10 says that <span style="font-style:italic;">‘The joy of the Lord is your strength’.<span style="font-style:italic;"></span></span> Imagine that! Of all the qualities that Nehemiah could have chosen in the character of God he highlights God’s joy as the source of our strength.<br /><br />This is not difficult to grasp. Happy people are energized people. They are motivated people. They see life as a gift and enter each day with a sense of wonder and expectation. Something deep within is then source of their strength – the joy of God.<br /><br />Listen to the prophet Habakkuk on this subject:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />Though the fig tree may not blossom, nor fruit be on the vines; though the labour of the olive may fail, and the fields yield no food; though the flock may be cut off from the fold, and there be no herd in the stalls – Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation. Hab 3.17-18.</span><br /><br />You couldn’t paint a bleaker picture in an agricultural society. Crops and livestock alike fail. It looks grim. It looks hopeless. It’s a depressing scene. But Habakkuk makes a decision. He is not looking at the temporal he is looking at the eternal. He is focusing on God.<br /><br />Consider Isaiah in the 6th chapter of his book. In the year that King Uzziah died he saw the Lord high and lifted up. He went from a place of grief to a place of worship and awe. That’s what Habakkuk was doing. He wouldn’t let the grief overwhelm him. God is bigger. God is greater. <br /><br />Psalm 98.4 says, <span style="font-style:italic;">'Make a joyful noise to the Lord all the earth. Make a loud noise and rejoice and sing praise'.</span> Everything in creation is designed to rejoice in the Lord and one day it will. In the mean time we can be the vangaurd of God's creation that chooses to rejoice and praise Him because we understand what He has achieved in Christ for us!<br /><br />Jesus has been exalted far above principalities and powers, thrones and dominions. He truly is Lord and as we worship and rejoice in Him He can change any situation. Think of Paul and Silas in the Philippian jail. Despite their beatings they were praising God. They were joying in the God of their salvation and He sent an earthquake that loosed their chains and set in motion events that would change the city by establishing a worshipping community - a church.<br /><br />This ability to joy in God is a fruit of the Spirit. We can cultivate it by choosing to rejoice in all the circumstances of life. Ask yourself this question: “What is the one thing that could happen to me that would silence my praise and rob me of joy?” Whatever it is, it has power over you until you release it to God and choose to worship and joy in Him.<br /><br />That’s what Habakkuk did. For a farmer failed crops and sick livestock was the one thing that could rob them of joy. But Habakkuk is hopeful because he serves the God of Hope – the God of Joy. Listen to his closing words from his short prophetic book;<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">The Lord is my strength’ He will make my feet like deer’s feet. And He will make me walk on my high hills.</span> This is a song! It’s a hymn of praise to the God who never changes no matter what happens in life. This is where our real strength lies.<br /><br />Take time this week to cultivate a spirit of joyful thanksgiving every day. Your name is written in heaven and Jesus said this is to be a source of rejoicing, Luke 10.20. It is true every day. Focus on eternal realities and your life will be like a thermostat not a thermometer. You will change the atmosphere around you instead of being changed by it!Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-63284256786743826092011-10-12T19:54:00.000-07:002011-10-12T20:41:23.617-07:00Make Every Effort Part 5<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-jl9I3hTcZ-k/TpZbmZXe1RI/AAAAAAAAASY/lbDgO0sJ9jk/s1600/Unity%2B1"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 259px; height: 194px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-jl9I3hTcZ-k/TpZbmZXe1RI/AAAAAAAAASY/lbDgO0sJ9jk/s320/Unity%2B1" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5662814296667510034" /></a><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Make every effort to guard the unity that the Spirit gives, with your lives bound together in peace. Eph 4.3 Translated by Tom Wright.</span><br /><br />Eph 4.1-16 is a key passage of scripture. Once again the phrase <span style="font-style:italic;">‘Make every effort’</span> is used. Notice that we are not asked to produce unity, only to guard it! It is not of human origin. It is based on the work of Jesus. His death on the cross has removed all barriers to God and to each other.<br /><br />In Paul’s context the biggest social and religious barriers existed between Jews and non-Jews, (often called Gentiles). They simply didn’t mix. But now Paul declares that through Messiah Jesus the partition that divides them is broken down. Now they are both united in Him. Together they make up the one new man, Eph 2.14-18.<br /><br />From Ephesians we can say a number of things about this unity.<br /><br />1. It is organic not organizational. It may develop organizational expression over time, but in essence it’s organic in nature. In other words it is based on a shared life source. Trees have structure but its life is organic. A tree can remain standing even after it is dead. But its fruitfulness is dependent on maintaining life.<br /><br />2. It is communal not common. The life that we share is ‘in the Spirit’ and we all share it in Christ. To use Paul’s language again from 1 Cor 12.13 NIV <span style="font-style:italic;">For we were all baptized by one Spirit so as to form one body—whether Jews or Gentiles, slave or free—and we were all given the one Spirit to drink.</span> Our sense of community is created by this shared life in the Spirit. <br /><br />3. It is a unity based on fulfilled righteousness that is now sealed in God’s peace. Jesus didn’t conquer armies to secure this unity. He was no Alexander. He died on a cross to fulfill the penalty of the law securing righteousness as a gift for all those who believe. Now we have peace with God and each other. So we can’t keep this unity through fighting for it! We don't fight flesh and blood! We guard against the enemy destroying it through believers that become fleshly in their attitudes and actions. More on that later.<br /><br />If we unpack these sixteen verses from Ephesians 4 we can see seven things that help us to preserve the unity of the Spirit. They are seven things we must make an effort towards. Here they are as I see it:<br /><br />1. Live up to your calling – Eph 4.1 This is so needed today in the body of Christ. Our calling is characterized by four things; it’s a high calling – Phil 3.14; it’s a heavenly calling – Heb 3.1;It's a holy calling - 2Tim 1.9 and it’s a humble calling – 1Cor 1.26.<br /> <br />Prince William in the UK has been educated differently to most people because he is 2nd in line for the throne. It is a high calling. Things that ordinary people do he can’t do. His calling demands lively differently. And he accepts it. A high call means high privilege and high responsibility.<br /> <br />A heavenly calling shows us the source of our call. It is from above. John the Baptist said that a man can receive nothing unless it is from heaven. This is the source of all true authority and anointing. A church can give you a salary, a car, a manse and insurance but only God can give you a calling that empowers you to fulfill His will.<br /><br />Christians who get drunk are not living up to their holy calling. Something is missing. One way of making a real effort to keep the unity of the Spirit is not to grieve the Spirit by living as though we don’t know Jesus. This issue of personal holiness is important. Holy means separated, set apart for God’s use. If we learn to live with that attitude it is easier to say no to stuff that makes you an instrument in the hand of the enemy.<br /><br />Finally we have a humble calling. None of us get into the Kingdom through self effort. We all have to become like little children and receive God's grace and forgiveness. Boasting is excluded.<br /><br />2. Work on attitudes and actions – Eph 4.2. Paul includes four; humility, gentleness, patience and forbearance. Each one of these is both an attitude and an action.<br /><br />Humility is not thinking less of yourself, it’s thinking of yourself less! Jesus demonstrated this by washing feet. He didn’t see Himself above this task. That was His attitude. He washed the feet of the disciples, that was the action that followed. We need both. I know those who work hard on having a good attitude but are light on actions that follow through. Others are good at following through but do so with gritted teeth. Attitude is somewhat lacking.<br /><br />Gentleness. I love this word. None of us like to be handled roughly either physically or emotionally. Recently I had keyhole surgery to unlock my ‘frozen shoulder’. For the first time in a year I can raise my left arm above my head. Wonderful! But I am enduring five weeks of physiotherapy where my muscles are being stretched in order to regain full movement. It’s painful at times. But the folk who work with me know what they are doing. Above all they are gentle. They understand that after invasive surgery like this I don’t need an aggressive body building maneuvers. Slow and gentle does it. We need to handle people in the same way. Too many are broken and abused. Paul tells us in Gal 6.1 that those who need restoration should be cared for by those who are spiritual and have a spirit of gentleness. Attitude and action again working together.<br /><br />Patience is the ability to handle pressure without letting your blood boil. There will always be situation in life where people press your buttons. They get to you. They wind you up. The temptation is to ‘let them have it!’ But blasting people in this way seldom helps. You may feel justified, you may feel better for getting that off your chest but it does nothing to preserve the unity of the Spirit. Those who work with anger management talk about AT - Anger Threshold. Some people have a LAT – low anger threshold. They have to work at getting a HAT – high anger threshold. In other words they keep cool for longer. For the believer this is not just about keeping a lid on things then punching a cushion when you get home – however helpful that might be! It’s about an inner transformation through the work of the Spirit. Paul tells us we need to show patience to ‘all men’.<br /><br />Finally we have forbearance. This is similar to patience but is more nuanced. It is the ability to let things that are legitimately irritating to us slide. To use the JB Philips translation; ‘Make a generous allowance for one another’. I like that. Most parents understand this. If you over correct a child they loose heart. The motivation to want to do better next time goes. I had to learn how to major on the majors and let the other stuff go. Some parents major on the minors and the majors and all the chords in between. It doesn’t really work as a long-term strategy for ringing about change. It doesn’t make for peace, only conformity. It doesn’t preserve the unity of the Spirit.<br /><br />3. Eph 4.4-6 NIV There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called to one hope when you were called; one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all. This verse had a beautiful chiasm structure that places Jesus at the centre of everything. There may be many churches that express the Kingdom of God locally but only one body. This should have a profound impact on the way we relate to other believers from other fellowships. It is not a competition. It’s collaboration. Recognising this truth gives us the motivation to make more effort with other believers who see things differently from us. Jesus died for them too. He loves them as well as us. Let’s not erect barriers He died to pull down!<br /><br />4. Get to know your grace gift – Eph 4. 7 NIV But to each one of us grace has been given as Christ apportioned it. Each one of us has a grace gift. It is much easier to make an effort to keep the unity of the Spirit if I know who you are and what you’re called to do. Too often I have seen grace gifts defined purely in terms of Eph 4.11 and the zenith is reached when you are full time. But the grace gift of pastoral care can operate in many vocational settings. I know a businessman who is great at discipling other businessmen. His pastoral gift works in the market place looking after other businessmen. Trying to be what we are not doesn’t preserve unity, it destroys it. I read a report recently of a large church that imploded after five years. It was a church with thousands of members. 60% left over a very short period of time. An analysis was made by a Christian Consultant as to why. He did a personality profile test of the leadership and then of the members. He discovered that the members were trying to be like the leaders in personality but it was contrary to their type. They were trying to be what they were not! And after a few years of trying they couldn’t sustain the pressure. Some people are more intuitive while others are ore analytical. Some are introvert while others are more extroverts. Our grace gift will work through our different personality types.<br /><br />5. Learn to receive the grace gift of others, especially those that equip you for service – Eph 4.11-13. Jesus put it like this; If you receive a prophet in the name of a prophet you receive the prophet’s reward; Matt 10.41 Receiving from others helps to preserve unity. We receive as well as give. We minister and are ministered to. That’s how it works. The ministries of apostle, prophet, evangelist, pastor and teacher are there to, <span style="font-style:italic;">"give God's people the equipment they need for their work of service"</span>, Tom Wright's translation. Only by receiving them within the sphere of the gift they operate in do we benefit from their ministry.<br /><br />6. Aim for maturity – Eph 4.13-16. Some Christians need to grow up! The basic problem of the Corinthian church was immaturity. They acted as babes in Christ. Babies are cute and adorable but we rightly expect them to grow and mature. A child that isn’t able to talk and be potty trained by five is a worry. Here are three things Paul highlights in the text that he looks for in a maturing Christian.<br /><br />Discernment. The ability to spot a wind of teaching and navigate through it so that you stay on course instead of jumping from one Christian fad to the next. <br /><br />Truthing it in our relationships. I am trying to convey the force of the Greek here as Paul wrote it. Most times it is translated ‘speaking the truth’, but ‘truthing it’ is better. Again the force is attitude and action. Being truthful, not just with our words but with our life.<br /><br />Being connected. Joints are the points of connection in the body. It is where two members meet and interact. Mature believers understand the importance of connection. They don’t need to be told to go to church or get into a connect group. They understand that this was how the early church organised itself in order to do life together. Who are you connected to? Who speaks into your life? Who do you go to for advice and counsel? And do those people demonstrate that they too are following Jesus?<br /><br />7. Finally Eph 4.16 focuses on every part doing its share of the work. This causes growth of the body in love, <span style="font-style:italic;">‘as each part does its work’</span>. Taking personal responsibility for your life is crucial. Nothing significant or lasting will happen until you do. Every one of us has a vital part to play in building up the body. So play your part. Getting connected puts you into a set of relationships that helps you to know where, when and how you can serve. My hand is joined to my wrist. It is not on the end of my ankle! It knows it’s a hand through the connection of relationships it has. It’s the same with us. Our relationships are intended to help us know who we are so we can serve effectively. You can’t serve in isolation. You need the body and the body needs you.<br /><br />To make an effort in anything requires us to re prioritize our life. The unity of the Spirit is a reality Jesus gave His life for. Ask for grace to apply these seven points of progress to your life so that you become a person who actively guards unity. And then watch what God is able to do with a company of people who live in this way.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-41137355974585420632011-10-05T00:26:00.000-07:002011-10-05T01:13:30.843-07:00Make Every Effort Part 4<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-GskFvsH6Mrk/TowO4h7kqNI/AAAAAAAAASQ/tRQUIe9Sk0I/s1600/Effort%2B4"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 225px; height: 225px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-GskFvsH6Mrk/TowO4h7kqNI/AAAAAAAAASQ/tRQUIe9Sk0I/s320/Effort%2B4" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5659915196041570514" /></a><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">But we, brethren, having been taken away from you for a short time in presence, not in heart, endeavoured more eagerly to see your face with great desire. Therefore we wanted to come to you—even I, Paul, time and again—but Satan hindered us, 1Thess 2.17-18</span><br /><br />This is another occasion when Paul uses the phrase <span style="font-style:italic;">‘Make every effort’</span>. From the account in Acts we learn that Paul had to flee Thessalonica because of persecution only two weeks after the establishment of the church. But in that short space of time he had taken them into his heart. Now he had to leave.<br /><br />At the first opportunity he writes to them, expressing both his desire to see them and explained the many failed attempts he had made to get to them. But it still stands that he had ‘made every effort’ to see their face. They were separated in presence but not in heart. That is a wonderful thought. It tells us that relationships that have real value are heart relationships. I believe they display four essential qualities:<br /><br />1. You are mindful of the other person even when you are not together. You carry them in your heart. It is difficult not to pray for such people. They are present in your thinking. Paul felt snatched away from these saints and longed to be with them.<br /><br />2. You look forward to the reunion - to when you can be together. Paul desired to be with this church. All of us have experienced this. Those who have been in love know exactly what is being said here. The one you love takes up your thoughts so much so that when you are separated you long to be together. To quote Shakespeare: <span style="font-style:italic;">”Absence makes the heart grow fonder”.</span><br /><br />3. You actively seek ways to be together. That’s what Paul was doing. He had made several failed attempts to get to them, but he wanted them to know he hadn’t given up. He wrote to them so that they would be assured of his love, that he was mindful of them and that he would make it there – one day!<br /><br />4. You openly share the value you place on the relationship. This is a very vulnerable place to be. To declare love for another, whether a friend, a sweetheart or even another family member is never easy. Taking the initiative leaves you open to rejection. We all want reciprocation when we declare love for another – but there are no guarantees.<br /><br />Paul had no such reservations. He openly declares his love and joy in this group of believers. He would make every effort to see them again. The enemy would not have the last word.<br /><br />I love the tenacious spirit Paul displays. It shows the priority that he places on relationships, especially with other believers. Even when absent he felt connected. That’s what heart connection does. It transcends time and distance.<br /><br />I have a friend who is a Doctor of Psychology. Her thesis was written on <span style="font-weight:bold;">“The Absent Father”</span>. She explored the impact that this generation has experienced through fathers who were busy building careers and were not at home much. She included missionaries and pastors, who often spend extended periods away from their children. To her surprise the kids of many (though not all) missionaries and pastors fared well, while the kids of most (though not all) businessmen suffered identity issues and problems with self worth. <br /><br />After careful study she came to this conclusion: A father can be absent but emotionally present and present but emotionally absent. The degree of emotional or heart connection was the crucial factor. Letters and phone calls had value when the father returned home and was emotionally present. Without heart connection the children still felt the distance.<br /><br />In the church we need to prioritise emotional presence in our relationships. I must confess I have had to learn how to do this over the years. It didn’t come naturally to me. Have you ever had a conversation with someone and you felt like they weren’t there? They were in another place. Ask them to repeat your last sentence and they couldn’t. They are already thinking about their next appointment or how to deal with that problem that keeps occupying them. That was me. But for the most part I've changed. I've learned active listening skills that have helped make make genuine connection. To really be present with a person.<br /><br />Jesus knew how to be emotionally connected to people. He had heart connection. He could weep over Jerusalem for missing their hour of opportunity. He could weep at the grave of Lazarus, even though He knew he would rise from the dead. He could look at a young man who was bound by money and love him. Heart connection. You can’t fake it. People know when it’s there and when it isn’t.<br /><br />When Jesus called the twelve to follow Him they literally went on a journey. ‘Follow Me’ was the only requirement. But in the process of time the nature of their relationship changed. He took them into His heart. They went from being servants to friends; a friendship characterised by openhearted sharing: <br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />I no longer call you servants, because a servant does not know his master's business. Instead, I have called you friends, for everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you, John 15.15 NIV.</span><br /><br />He held nothing back. In doing so Jesus teaches us the importance of these kinds of friendships and these kinds of connections – heart connections. We see this later in Paul’s letter to Timothy. This was a man he had done ministry with for at least 15 years. He considered him a son in the faith; a close friend. <br /><br />Remember Paul’s pastoral letters are his last words to two young pastors before he dies. They are at the end of his ministry. And at the close of this letter to Timothy listen to his heart cry:<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Do your best to come to me quickly, for Demas, because he loved this world, has deserted me and has gone to Thessalonica, 1Tim 4.9.</span><br /><br />The phrase <span style="font-style:italic;">‘Do your best’</span> is the same Greek word we have been studying translated in other places as, <span style="font-style:italic;">‘Make very effort’</span>. A co-worker has abandoned Paul; he feels the loneliness; he feels the pain. He wants Timothy. And then in verse 21 we get: <span style="font-style:italic;">"Do your best to get here before winter".</span><br /><br />“Come quickly, come before winter”, is the cry of his heart. Twice within a few verses Paul shares his need; not for money but for friendship; for someone who is loyal and understands him. I find this very moving. To paraphrase Paul: “Make every effort to get here soon and definitely before winter”. The unspoken subtext, “I need you here, now”.<br /><br />Timothy was in Ephesus leading the church; Paul was in Rome awaiting execution by Nero. Paul didn’t want Timothy to miss the opportunity of taking a sea going vessel to Rome before the winter made sea journeys hazardous. He wanted the presence of the man he felt the most heart connection to. And Timothy was a man who would make every effort.<br /><br />That’s when friendship counts; when you are up against it, when you are abandoned; when you feel alone. When Jesus faced Gethsemane He asked for Peter, James and John to be with Him. Yet Jesus was surprised they couldn't manage to pray for even one hour with Him. Perhaps they needed to make more effort! When David was on the run from King Saul he took strength and comfort from Jonathan. They had heart connection. And Jonathan made the effort to encourage, protect David and speak up for him before his father.<br /><br />But friendship also counts in times of celebration too. In Matt 22 we have the story of the wedding feast. The guests were invited but they refused to come. They would not make the effort. It said something about the value they placed on the relationship. There was no real heart connection.<br /><br />The son who left home discovered this in Luke 15. When his money ran out so did his friends. They were fair-weather friends in it for the ride, not the relationship. When he finally came to himself he considered how the servants in his fathers house were treated and suddenly he saw things differently. They were loved and cared for, appreciated.<br /><br />And on his return he got another shock. He was reinstated as a son because the father would not withhold this heart connection from his own son. Ironically the older brother suffered from the same disconnection, even though he stayed on the farm. He could not enter into the celebration of the return of his younger brother. He too needed to have a change of heart. <br /><br />The story is called <span style="font-style:italic;">"The Prodigal Son”</span> when it should be called <span style="font-style:italic;">"The Longing Father”</span>, as in longing for genuine heartfelt connection with his two sons. Both of them had failed in different ways to appreciate what their father had to give them. In bad times, in good times we need friends around and we need to make every effort to be with them in those times.<br /><br />A ten year study of people over seventy years old in Australia found that an active network of friends increase life expectancy by 22%. No friends and you die younger; that’s how important real friendships are to life and health. And like all things in life worth having it requires effort, but if we truly place value on relationships then the effort is not difficult. It is one of ordering our priorities.<br /><br />Think if Zacchaeus in Luke 19.1-10. He was wealthy and a chief tax collector and short! Everyone knew him. But he was passionate about meeting Jesus and so he did a very undignified thing for a chief, wealthy, tax collector to do. He climbed a tree – just to see Jesus. While others may have been amused by this sight Jesus invited Himself to his house. He took him very seriously and that little man’s life was changed forever. He made every effort. He was prepared to look foolish. Jesus mattered more.<br /><br />Think of blind Bartimeaus in Mark 10.46. When he knew that Jesus was passing by he would not stop crying out. When people told him to be silent he cried out even louder, <span style="font-style:italic;">“Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me”</span>. By calling Jesus the Son of David he was acknowledging His legitimate claim to the thrown of Israel. Jesus was their King and Messiah and Bartimaeus freely confessed this. He made every effort to get Jesus attention and he succeeded. The result – he received his sight fully restored, and then followed Him.<br /><br />Think of the Canaanite woman with her demonised daughter in Matt 15.21. The disciples want her to be sent away. Jesus reminds her that He is sent to the lost sheep of the house of Israel – not the Canaanite gentiles. But she persists, worshipping Him, beseeching Him. And then Jesus is at His most controversial. He tells her it is not right to take the children’s bread and feed it to the dogs.<br /><br />She doesn’t get offended. She is on a mission. Nothing will stop her. The well being of her daughter is at stake and only Jesus can help. She is making every effort to touch His heart. And her reply is astonishing, humble and clever. <span style="font-style:italic;">“Even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from the masters table”.</span> Genius! <br /><br />Jesus is impressed. <span style="font-style:italic;">"I have not found faith like this, not even in all Israel".</span> This woman gets it and Jesus commends her faith. For that is what it is. Faith inspires us to make every effort to press in to God; to find heart connection. This is the only time in the NT where a person is delivered from a demon and Jesus is not actually present with the afflicted person. Such was the level of her faith. She made every effort and her faith was rewarded.<br /><br />Think now of Hebrews 10.24-25.<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds, not giving up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another—and all the more as you see the Day approaching.</span><br /><br />Meeting together is always an effort. If you have a family it means getting up early enough for everyone to have time to get showered and dressed. I’ve done this with six kids. I know what’s involved. It often means organising what you eat for lunch the day before, even preparing it then sometimes. But if you value the church, if you value fellowship, if you value corporate worship, if you value God’s word then you will make every effort to be there.<br /><br />I’m saddened by some of the excuses I hear people make as to why they don’t make it to church sometimes; a late night, a busy week, no time for breakfast, difficult children. Come on! That is the stuff of life. It wouldn’t stop us getting to work most days of the week. You find a way to make it happen. Just this past month I know of guys who get up early to watch the Rugby World Cup, but can’t make the effort to be at a prayer meeting on a Sunday evening. They are making every effort to watch the Rugby. <br /><br />I have no problem with that. That's great. Now let’s make an effort to pray together. Let’s see it as a priority that can make a difference in our town, our country, and our world. What I am talking about is valuing what God values so that what we make an effort to do comes out of a sense of conviction. <br /><br />In John 21 we have the story of Peter who decides to go fishing. He goes back to his old trade. The chances are that after his vehement denial of Jesus he now saw himself disqualified for ministry. He had disqualified himself. So off he went and because he is a leader a group of them followed him, including John. You see your gift keeps operating in all circumstances! They all made a huge effort to catch fish. They stayed up all night. Experienced fishermen. Yet they caught nothing.<br /><br />Think of how demoralised they would have felt. This was their trade. Imagine what went through Peter’s head. <span style="font-style:italic;">I’m no good as an apostle and now I’m no good at fishing either.</span> Disaster! And then Jesus shows up and tells them to cast the net on the other side. They are tired. They are hungry. They are demoralised. But they make very effort to obey. It isn’t a huge demand but for where they were at, it took a gargantuan effort to move that net. But when they did, result!<br /><br />We can make all kinds of effort and put that effort into the right thing but without Jesus, without His guidance and help, we achieve nothing. But to make every effort in response to what Jesus has said changes everything. And when they get to shore Jesus already has breakfast for them. He meets every need. He restores Peter’s dignity as a fisherman; He feeds him as a friend and then restores him as an apostle. Wonderful. Jesus made the effort to be there for Peter because He valued the man and saw beyond his failure.<br /><br />And John finishes where he began; with a simple phrase that tells us what discipleship is all about, <span style="font-style:italic;">‘Follow Me’</span>. This is what we must make every effort to do. Follow Him. And as we do we too will find ourselves being there for each other as Paul was for Timothy, as Barnabas was for Paul, as Jesus was for the twelve. John the aged apostle calls it laying down your life for the brethren, 1John 3.16. Now that is worth making an effort for.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-69136167793878204462011-09-28T09:21:00.000-07:002011-09-28T09:48:27.443-07:00Make Every Effort Part 3<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Dz-Zti9W7NA/ToNPwTAv5DI/AAAAAAAAASI/irLGsVn928I/s1600/The%2BPoor%2B1.jpeg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 240px; height: 162px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Dz-Zti9W7NA/ToNPwTAv5DI/AAAAAAAAASI/irLGsVn928I/s320/The%2BPoor%2B1.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5657453248063202354" /></a><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">James, Cephas and John, those esteemed as pillars, gave me and Barnabas the right hand of fellowship when they recognized the grace given to me. They agreed that we should go to the Gentiles, and they to the circumcised. All they asked was that we should continue to remember the poor, the very thing I had been eager to do all along, Gal 2.10</span><br /><br />Like all of the other passages we have looked at in recent blogs, the Greek word for eager, <span style="font-style:italic;">spoudazō</span>, means <span style="font-style:italic;">‘make every effort’</span>. What is clear from this text is that all of the apostolic leaders believed that caring for the poor was an important priority. They were eager to do it and they made every effort to do it throughout their ministries.<br /><br />But why this commitment to caring for the poor? What informed their convictions? Here are some key scriptures that shaped the social conscience of Israel in the past and so would, in turn, have shaped them. <br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">When you reap the harvest of your land, do not reap to the very edges of your field or gather the gleanings of your harvest. Do not go over your vineyard a second time or pick up the grapes that have fallen. Leave them for the poor and the foreigner. I am the LORD your God, Lev 19.9-10.</span><br /><br />During a harvest there would be a group of workers that went through a field in line with sickles cutting and then others followed gathering the sheaves. Invariably there were parts that were missed between each of the reapers. These could have been caught in a second wave of reaping but God forbade this. It had to be left for the poor or the foreigner in the land. These people along with orphans and widows were the most vulnerable in any society. So God made laws to protect them.<br /><br />In one sense this was an enforced generosity on the part of the field owner towards the poor. But in relation to the whole harvest, the gleanings, those parts of the field missed in the first wave of reaping, was a tiny percentage of the whole. God was tempering our tendency towards greed by making the landowners leave enough for the poor. It did not substantially effect their profit.<br /><br />This is what makes the story of Ruth so beautiful. She was a poor widow who gathered the gleanings from Boaz’s field. When they meet his heart went out to her and he told the reapers who worked for him to intentionally leave handfuls of grain, just for her, Ruth 2.1-12.<br /><br />The same was true for the grape harvest. Not every grape was picked on the first pass of reaping. Invariably some were missed and God legislated that these should be left for the poor and the foreigner. God was establishing laws that would help to shape a just society. The burden was not placed just on the state but on the people as a whole.<br /><br />In Lev 25.4-7; 11-12 we read:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">But in the seventh year the land is to have a year of Sabbath rest, a sabbath to the LORD. Do not sow your fields or prune your vineyards. Do not reap what grows of itself or harvest the grapes of your untended vines. The land is to have a year of rest. Whatever the land yields during the sabbath year will be food for you—for yourself, your male and female servants, and the hired worker and temporary resident who live among you, as well as for your livestock and the wild animals in your land. Whatever the land produces may be eaten.</span><br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />The fiftieth year shall be a jubilee for you; do not sow and do not reap what grows of itself or harvest the untended vines. For it is a jubilee and is to be holy for you; eat only what is taken directly from the fields.</span><br /><br />The Sabbath rest was a weekly feature in Israeli life. But God also built this principle of rest into how the land was worked. So every seven years the land rested. There was no sowing and no reaping allowed. If anything grew up it did so from the previous years seeding. So whatever harvest appeared was a free for all, including the animals.<br /><br />This was then extended to the year of Jubilee that happened every 50 years when all debts were cancelled and lands returned to their ancestral owners. Thus year 49 was a Sabbath year followed by another Sabbath year in year 50. Two years of Sabbaths. Now if were in any way disadvantaged as a citizen if Israel during that time it was wonderful for you. You had food for your family! You could live.<br /><br />The spirit of all this is best captured by the verse in Deut 15.11:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">There will always be poor people in the land. Therefore I command you to be open-handed toward your fellow Israelites who are poor and needy in your land.</span><br /><br />God knew that the poor would always be there but He didn’t want the Israelite community to become hardened and indifferent to this reality. He wanted them to be <span style="font-style:italic;">‘open-handed’</span> towards the poor and needy. On the other side of the coin God had these instructions to those who wandered into a neighbours field in Duet 23.24-25:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">If you go into your neighbour's vineyard, you may eat as many grapes as you wish, but do not put any grapes into your basket.25 If you go into your neighbour's grain field, you may pick grain with your hands, but you must not cut down your neighbour's grain with your sickle, NCV</span>.<br /><br />I find this amazing. There was freedom to take enough food from someone else’s harvest for yourself but no more, no matter whom you were. Again the thinking behind this was that in proportion to the harvest, this was an insignificant amount and expressed God’s heart of generosity.<br /><br />All of this teaching and practice was well known to the apostles and endorsed by Jesus. In Luke 14.13-14 NCV Jesus challenged His hearers with this statement:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">“Instead, when you give a feast, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, and the blind. Then you will be blessed, because they have nothing and cannot pay you back. But you will be repaid when the good people rise from the dead."</span><br /><br />Notice His reasoning here, ‘They cannot repay you’. We give to those who are powerless to give back in this lifetime. In one sense this helps us define who the poor are, those who have nothing to repay us with. Paul goes on to quote Jesus to the Ephesian elders. They are some of his parting words to them:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">I showed you in all things that you should work as I did and help the weak. I taught you to remember the words Jesus said: 'It is more blessed to give than to receive.'</span><br /><br />There is a blessing in receiving for sure. We all like being blessed. But the truth is that it is more blessed to give than to receive. I did not understand this truth until I had children. But the joy of seeing their response when I did something for them far outweighed what it cost me to do it in the first place. I felt more blessed than they did!<br /><br />When we get to the book of Acts we see how this principle of making every effort to care for the poor played out in the new church community. For a start they relinquished personal ownership of land and property in order to release money to care for the community, <br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><br />The apostles were doing many miracles and signs, and everyone felt great respect for God. All the believers were together and shared everything. They would sell their land and the things they owned and then divide the money and give it to anyone who needed it. The believers met together in the Temple every day. They ate together in their homes, happy to share their food with joyful hearts. They praised God and were liked by all the people. Every day the Lord added those who were being saved to the group of believers, Acts 2.43-47 NCV.</span><br /><br />In the midst of God’s awesome presence seen in signs and wonders the following happened:<br /><br />1. They shared everything they had!<br />2. They gave to those who needed it.<br />3. They met daily.<br />4. They ate together, happy to share their food.<br />5. They praised God<br />6. They were liked by the people who watched them<br />7. Everyday believers were added to their number.<br /><br />The generosity of spirit they had was as a direct result of their surrender to the Lordship of Jesus. The OT commands were now being worked out in their community spontaneously. Awesome!<br /><br />This is played out further in Acts 4.32-37 and 5.1-11 where a sharp contrast is made between Barnabas and his generosity and the deceit of Ananias and Sapphira. The issue was not the reluctance of this couple to give everything. Holding back something for themselves was their free choice, their right. There was nothing sinful in this. The problem was that they lied about how much they received for the property. They left the community with the impression that they had given everything.<br /><br />It is hard to know what was in their thinking when they did this. Perhaps they thought that giving all was the only option. Perhaps they felt guilty about keeping something back for themselves. Perhaps they felt less spiritual if the others knew this. Perhaps they felt they couldn’t live up to the expectations of others. Whatever the reason they lied. And it cost them their lives. This is the first case of church discipline that we read about. As you might expect fear fell upon the whole community, inside and outside of the church.<br /><br />All this took place under the new covenant of grace established by Jesus! Why? I believe it was because the church was moving forward with great momentum and the Holy Spirit knew that this sin would slow the process. He did not want the hearts of the people discouraged by this deceit. Honesty before God and the people in such matters was crucial.<br /><br />Notice too that Sapphira was judged separately from her husband. Saying she was submitting to his leadership was no excuse. She too had a choice and she chose to collude with Ananias. God held her accountable for her choice! They were judged as individuals unlike Achan and his family in the book of Joshua.<br /><br />When we get to Acts 6 we find the first record of unrest in the church. Essentially it is a social justice issue. The Greek speaking Jewish widows were finding themselves disadvantaged when it came to food distribution. The Hebrew speaking widows were getting more! We are not told who was perpetrating this injustice. Luke records it in a way that hints it is rooted in racism similar to the problems that existed between Jews and Samaritans.<br /><br />The key thing to see is that the apostles took this issue seriously and acted. They laid out criteria for the selection of a new level of leadership that could take care of this problem. And the criteria combined the spiritual with the practical. Remember that in the Bible wisdom was the ability to live life practically and well according to Proverbs. So they chose men full of the Spirit and wisdom and the apostles appointed them, Acts 6.1-6.<br /><br />These men acted impartially so that justice in the community was restored. Listen to the consequence for the whole church in the next verse:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">The word of God was continuing to spread. The group of followers in Jerusalem increased, and a great number of the Jewish priests believed and obeyed, Acts 6.7.</span><br /><br />Not only were people saved but priests, the hardest group to win, were converted. Amazing. Later in Acts 11.29-30 the believers in Antioch learn, through a prophetic utterance, of a famine throughout the world. In response they determine to send relief aid to the believers in Jerusalem. They saw themselves as connected to that distant community and so social justice became a burden they willingly carried.<br /><br />It’s worth noting that they responded according to their ability. <br /><span style="font-style:italic;">The disciples, as each one was able, decided to provide help for the believers living in Judea, Acts 11.29 TNIV.</span> None gave beyond their means, but they did give.<br /><br />This apostolic practice is further endorsed in the letters of Paul, James and John. Take a look at James 2.15-18, 1 John 3.16-18 (which strongly resonates with Deut 15.11). Listen to Paul in 1Thess 5.14;<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">And we urge you, brothers and sisters, warn those who are idle and disruptive, encourage the disheartened, help the weak, be patient with everyone.</span><br /><br />Everyone needs patience and to be dealt with patiently. That’s where Paul ends. Yet three specific categories of people are listed here. The lazy and disruptive (one word in the Greek), the fainthearted (literally small souled) and the weak. With each group Paul suggests a different approach whilst all need patience.<br /><br />The lazy group are able to work but choose not to. Paul says, ‘warn them’. In other words they need a kick, a challenge. He will later go so far as to say if a man won’t work he shouldn’t eat. Now there is a way of motivating someone. He even says don’t eat with such a person. They are not living up to Biblical standards and have no grasp of their social responsibility.<br /><br />The fainthearted don’t need to be challenged, warned or rebuked. These people have a small capacity. They need massive encouragement, building up. This of course requires discernment. We have to be able to tell the difference! If not, we may end up rebuking the fainthearted and encouraging the lazy. Not good! I’ve seen it happen.<br /><br />The final group are the weak. This term includes the poor, the sick, the lame, the blind, the orphan and the widow. These people need our support. Paul is clear that by support he means financial support. That is the context for using the word in Acts 20.35 NKJV.<br /><br />All of this resonates with the words of Jesus in Matt 25.31-47 where He speaks of the judgment of the nations. Look at part of the text here:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Then the King will say to those on His right hand, ‘Come, you blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world: for I was hungry and you gave Me food; I was thirsty and you gave Me drink; I was a stranger and you took Me in; I was naked and you clothed Me; I was sick and you visited Me; I was in prison and you came to Me.’ <br />“Then the righteous will answer Him, saying, ‘Lord, when did we see You hungry and feed You, or thirsty and give You drink? When did we see You a stranger and take You in, or naked and clothe You? Or when did we see You sick, or in prison, and come to You?’ And the King will answer and say to them, ‘Assuredly, I say to you, inasmuch as you did it to one of the least of these My brethren, you did it to Me.’</span><br /><br />This is Jesus speaking. We can rely on His words. Notice how unselfconscious the sheep are to these acts of kindness. It was part of their lifestyle. They did it without fanfare or hope of recognition. How amazing that when we care for the weak we are in fact caring for Jesus. Wow. I believe it’s time for the church to make an effort to care for the poor; to get involved in social justice issues. To find men full of the Spirit and wisdom who can come up with creative solutions to difficult social problems.<br /><br />We cannot look to government agencies to have the answers. They need to look to us, to the church. And we need to look to the Lord and step out in obedience. Paul tells us that love is expressed by loving our neighbour. A lawyer tried to justify himself once by asking Jesus who his neighbour was. Jesus then told the parable about the certain Samaritan. You'll find it in Luke 10.25-37.<br /><br />This is helpful. We cannot meet all the needs around us but we can meet the needs of those God puts in our way. Crossing over to the other side, as though we haven’t noticed, is not a legitimate option. We need to get involved. And like the Samaritan it costs us something in time, energy and money. But as we do, we have the assurance we are doing this to Jesus.<br /><br />Here are a few suggestions for how you can begin. <br /><br />1. In the parable of the certain Samaritan scripture tells us he was ‘moved with compassion’. The important thing is to allow yourself to feel what others are going through. Everything Jesus did came from this ability to have compassion on people in their pain and need. Pray that God opens your heart to embrace the pain of others. We must learn to weep with those who weep out of genuine empathy not as professional mourners.<br /><br />2. Let this compassion be translated into action of some kind. Dare to get involved. The Samaritan did what he could; he treated the man’s wounds and then bound them up, put him on his own donkey, took him to a place of refuge, paid for an extended stay and further care (two days wages – about £200 by todays reckoning), then promised to return to settle any outstanding accounts. That is very comprehensive.<br /><br />3. Involvement will always cost you something. It takes time, energy and money to make a difference. Choose a lifestyle that leaves enough for such demands. If you aim to live on 80% of your income then you will have money on hand when you need it. Too often we match our lifestyle to our full income. Remember if you have a bed to sleep in, a cupboard for your clothes and a roof over our head you have more than 75% of the people in the world!<br /><br />4. The goal is to help people so that they are empowered to help themselves and others. We don’t want to create dependency on us. The idea is to see people become whole so that they can face life with faith and hope. That’s what the Samaritan did for the man who fell among robbers. He knew it would take time but he had a clear goal.<br /><br />5. Dare to go on trip that takes you out of your comfort zone. There are many places in the world with great need. Don’t go on your own. Go with someone who knows what they are doing. You can easily find yourself out of your depth. And when you feel totally overwhelmed with the needs around you, remind yourself that you serve a God whose heart is so big He is able to meet all those needs through Jesus.<br /><br />I pray that as a believer and as a church we are able to embrace the needs of a broken people in a broken world and bring the touch of heaven to those who need it. Make every effort to remember the poor!Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-25087202620172728862011-09-23T09:43:00.000-07:002011-09-23T10:14:19.190-07:00Make Every Effort Part 2<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-sQZmfujtS0U/Tny8jOjRfnI/AAAAAAAAASA/kwYv3Vg7-Po/s1600/Just%2BAdd"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 94px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-sQZmfujtS0U/Tny8jOjRfnI/AAAAAAAAASA/kwYv3Vg7-Po/s320/Just%2BAdd" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5655602545457987186" /></a><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">For this very reason, make every effort to add to your faith goodness; and to goodness, knowledge; and to knowledge, self-control; and to self-control, perseverance; and to perseverance, godliness; and to godliness, mutual affection; and to mutual affection, love. For if you possess these qualities in increasing measure, they will keep you from being ineffective and unproductive in your knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ. But whoever does not have them is near-sighted and blind, forgetting that they have been cleansed from their past sins. Therefore, my brothers and sisters, make every effort to confirm your calling and election. For if you do these things, you will never stumble, and you will receive a rich welcome into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. 2Pet 1.5-11 NIV</span><br /><br />Twice in this passage the phrase <span style="font-weight:bold;">‘Make every effort’<span style="font-style:italic;"></span></span> is used. The text is really important for us. Like the other texts we have already looked at this is about ordering our priorities in life and ministry so that we succeed. That’s what the apostle Peter wants; that we be fruitful Christians. He says it’s possible for us to <span style="font-style:italic;">‘confirm’</span> our calling. In other words our life matches our profession.<br /><br />The key idea here is adding; to make sure you add to your faith. Faith is foundational according to 1Cor 3.11. Jesus is that foundation and faith in Him creates that foundation in your own life. Without it you are lost. But with Him as your foundation you are able to build a life that can bring praise to God.<br /><br />We build be adding. Peter gives us a list of things. He begins with virtue. This is moral excellence or goodness. This along with, perseverance, self control, and love are also listed by Paul as a product of the fruit of the Spirit in Gal 5.21-22.<br /><br />This tells me two things in particular. The first is that the fruit of the Spirit is not meant to be an exhaustive list. In Peter’s list there are four things mentioned also by Paul. Fruit can have many expressions. It is not limited to the list of nine by Paul or seven by Peter.<br /><br />The second thing is that fruit is a product of life. It is organic. Like a tree that grows and produces fruit, so we too are meant to grow and produce fruit. So when Peter tells us to ‘make every effort’ he is not telling us to try hard to produce fruit. He is telling us to order our lives in such a way that the organic process of God’s life in us will manifest in fruit.<br /><br />Many Christians begin well but then something in life makes them stumble. Maybe they get offended. Maybe they drift away. Maybe the cares of this world overwhelm them and the life of the seed is choked. Peter tells us that if we are purposeful and add to our faith we will continue to grow in our knowledge of Jesus.<br /><br />Now a house is built from the bottom up. First there is a superstructure, then the roof, windows and doors and then the fittings and utilities. Finally the place is decorated. This is how we are to build our lives. We add to the foundation so that a house is built.<br /><br />If we don’t add to our faith we remain vulnerable. Peter implies that we eventually develop spiritual myopia. We simply can’t see clearly and without clear vision people cast off restraint, Prov 29.18. Growth and advancement are meant to be the norm for believers. <br /><br />As we add to our faith we keep our vision clear. It helps us make good decisions in life, because we have established good priorities. These priorities develop our character and this in turn helps to shape our choices and ultimately our destiny. Adding to our faith is a must but where do we begin?<br /><br />This is not difficult. Just be honest with what you are struggling with in your life. Are you in a situation where you feel like giving up? Then maybe you need to add perseverance to your faith. Your present circumstances often tell you what it is God is working on right now in terms of developing your character.<br /><br />For the person who is newly saved but lives with a partner they need to add knowledge and virtue to their faith. Knowledge of how God sees marriage. Studying what the Bible has to say on this issue, or doing a marriage course can help with this. Virtue enables them to be able to talk to their partner in a loving way. In time something should change.<br /><br />The teenager who has lived with few boundaries and so is brash and undisciplined needs to add self-control to their faith. Without it they are captive to badly learned patterns of behaving. Remember too that this is a process. It takes time. Nor do these additions to our faith need to be sequential. Some can be happening at the same time. They are often linked.<br /><br />This kind of process often means coming into a relationship where someone else can hold you accountable for your progress. Wanting to change is half the battle but some people confuse desire with accomplishment. We often judge ourselves by our intentions but others by their actions. To ourselves we are gracious while to others we can be unnecessarily tough. Someone else can help us keep it real.<br /><br />Adding to your faith is a life long process. That’s why I try and position myself to be a lifetime learner. Paul says in 1 Cor 8.1 that knowledge can puff up. The danger is that we think we have arrived. He encourages the Corinthians to take a different position. “We don’t yet know as we ought to know”. There is more!<br /><br />There is a certain quality I find with lifetime learners. <br /><br />1. They are more eager to listen than to speak. This resonates with the book of proverbs that often distinguishes the wise man as the one who will listen or take a rebuke. The proud and the foolish don’t do this. They blurt out every thought without really considering their audience or the impact they will have.<br /><br />2. They don’t write people off just because they disagree with them over some issues. Many believers have vilified Dan Brown because of his book, ‘The Da Vinci Code’. I’ve read it. It’s disappointing. He is not a theologian or a historian. Maybe if he were he would be better informed. But it is a piece of fiction and he has written some other great books. ‘Digital Fortress’ and ‘Deception Point’ are excellent. In my opinion they would make great movies. Lifetime learners know how to make a discerning choice. They don’t throw the baby out with the bath water!<br /><br />3. They read widely. Doing a Masters Degree brought a certain discipline into my life when it came to study. It forced me to read widely around the subject I was preparing my thesis for. My professor helped to point me towards all the authors who had made a significant contribution to this field of study. I find some believers very narrow in their thinking. They read one book on an issue and think they now have the truth on that subject. It’s sloppy and careless. <br /><br />Read widely around a topic and use a mentor to point you to the authors who really have something to say. I know believers whose only view of the end times is informed by the ‘Left Behind’ series of books and films. If you want to be provoked to consider a different view then read Tom Wright’s book, ‘Surprised by Hope’. He is a brilliant theologian. Try adding to that the ‘Counterpoint Series’ published by Zondervan that presents different views on several topics each held by sincere orthodox Christians. <br /><br />4. They welcome critique and input from peers. This is fundamental to good research. This is why we do life together. We need the input and feedback of others. Even when it comes to interpreting the Bible we should do it as a community. We have a shared faith. Gordon Fee says the first community we are indebted to is the church in history. In other words what others have said in the past is important to know!<br /><br />5. They give deference to those who have helped them in their journey. Growing up in a little Brethren church helped me understand the meaning of hospitality. They were great at that and I’m grateful for what they showed me. But it was John Wimber who helped me add the experience of worship and healing to my faith. <br /><br />Peter Drucker became a great influence on my take on servant leadership. Through the writings of Henry Cloud and John Townsend I added boundaries to my life and it brought a whole new experience of freedom to me. I honour what each of them brought to my Christian experience and understanding. <br /><br />6. They remain open to learning something new all the time, even in an area where, according to others, they may be an acknowledged expert. Life has taught me that the more I know about a subject, the less I fully know. It helps to create a genuine humility in me. Someone may actually be able to add to my knowledge and experience of God if I maintain that posture of heart.<br /><br />7. They don’t presume what others don’t know. They begin by listening and then asking questions. The great Danish theologian and writer Søren Kierkegaard said that we couldn’t presume to teach anyone until we first learn what he or she knows. This is the attitude of a real servant. Don't presume what people need to know. Get to know them first, then you can help them. <br /><br />Let me challenge you this week to reflect on your own journey of faith. Are there some missing pieces? Is there a need for you to add to your faith? Everyone should be able to answer this in the affirmative. The only real question is what do you need to add. <br /><br />Take some time to think this through. Ask some of your close friends or peers what they think. Dare to listen to what they have to say. Then ‘make every effort’ to realign your life and priorities so that God can add this to you too. Remember, if you do, you will never be barren or unfruitful and your progress will be apparent to everyone around you.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-45109441486647409282011-09-16T01:36:00.000-07:002011-09-16T01:49:37.278-07:00Make Every Effort Part 1<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-L1g7JKWkGuw/TnMNRkGOipI/AAAAAAAAAR4/xGqmjCVenyU/s1600/Kitemark%2B1.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 179px; height: 208px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-L1g7JKWkGuw/TnMNRkGOipI/AAAAAAAAAR4/xGqmjCVenyU/s320/Kitemark%2B1.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5652876552678836882" /></a><br />This phrase is found several times in the NT. In a way it helps us to establish a set of priorities for living. When the Bible tells us to make every effort to do something it trying to help us see what is truly important. By focusing on the right things we are able to move forward in life and ministry. Success follows.<br /><br />In part 1 of this series I want to start with three statements that begin with the phrase, ‘Make every effort’. The Greek word behind this phrase is Spoudazo. It is variously translated as ‘labour’, ‘be diligent’, ‘study’, ‘to exert oneself’ and ‘bend every effort’.<br /><br />In 2 Peter 3.14-15 NIV we read this advice from the apostle Peter:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">But in keeping with his promise we are looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth, where righteousness dwells. So then, dear friends, since you are looking forward to this, make every effort to be found spotless, blameless and at peace with him. </span><br /><br />Peter is telling us to live now, in the light of the future. In the future there will be a new heaven and a new earth filled with righteousness, God’s righteousness. That’s what we look forward to. It’s coming as sure as the sunrise tomorrow. That should impact how we live today. So Peter says, <span style="font-style:italic;">‘make every effort to be found spotless, blameless and at peace with him’. </span><br /><br />One word summarises this approach to life, integrity. Integrity is about how everything in life fits together as a whole. To have integrity is to have an integrated life. This is not about being perfect; it’s about being authentic in the light of the gospel.<br /><br />There is a great search today for authenticity. It has produced more honesty but not more integrity. Honesty s a good thing but it can be rooted in pride. The youth who boasts in getting drunk to his friends is honest, but he lacks integrity. He carries no sense of shame. Integrity would give him that and compel him to want to change.<br /><br />The businessman who boasts to others about how he evades tax is honest, but not to the taxman. He lacks integrity. Integrity takes honesty to a new level. It’s not just about admitting what is true but living in truth. There is a difference!<br /><br />Job was a blameless man. He held on to his integrity even when the circumstances in life pushed him to blame God and react, Job 1.8; 2.3. He chose to worship instead, Job 1.21. But notice that it wasn’t easy for him to do this. The easy thing was for him to take his wife’s advice; <span style="font-style:italic;">‘Curse God and die’</span>, Job 2.9. But Job ‘made every effort’ to remain blameless – and he succeeded.<br /><br />Sometimes we experience things that make us want to react, to blame God, to blame others, to choose a course of action that we know won’t help. In those moments take the apostle Peter’s advice. Bend every effort to remain spotless. Joseph could have easily compromised his integrity and allowed himself to be seduced by Potiphar’s wife. But he said no. He chose to be blameless.<br /><br />And part of his challenge was accepting the false accusation that was laid against him after doing what was right. It must have taken amazing effort not to give in to despair and despondency. He drew on heavens grace and within a few years God honoured his choice. He honoured his integrity.<br /><br />These statements by the apostles to, <span style="font-style:italic;">‘make every effort’</span>, is not about summing all of the human willpower you can muster to get through life. It is about establishing new priorities. A life of integrity is to be our priority, even when it hurts! When our priorities are in agreement with scripture there is grace to live in them. God empowers us to live in truth.<br /><br />David could have killed Saul on at least two occasions. The situation presented itself and his men saw this as a divine opportunity. But David held back. Even cutting the edge of Saul’s garment brought conviction to his heart. Letting Saul live meant David remained a fugitive. It hurt. But he kept his integrity. And ultimately he became king.<br /><br />What pressure are you under at present that is tempting you to let go of your integrity? Don’t. Hold on. Make every effort to be what God has called you to be.<br /><br />The second passage is in Hebrews 4.11 NIV<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Let us, therefore, make every effort to enter that rest, so that no one will perish by following their example of disobedience.</span><br /><br />I love this text. We labour to enter His rest. Labour and rest in the same sentence? It doesn’t seem right, but it is. Think about what happens when most people go on holiday. How long does it take for them to unwind; to really disconnect and enjoy the break? How about you?<br /><br />I have a friend who is a high-flying businessman. He takes his laptop and mobile with him everywhere – including holidays. He can’t let go. For him to turn off his phone would take a huge effort. I understand this. I am wired that way too. But life and faith have taught me this is no way to live. It is in fact a sign of unbelief. <br /><br />The Sabbath principle is that we don’t need to work all the time. We can rest and trust God to give us enough the other six days so we can enjoy Him on the seventh. But we must prioritise this. We must make every effort! My old Bible College teacher told me that the promises of God work best when we rest in them. It’s true.<br /><br />Labour to enter into God’s rest, God’s provision, and God’s salvation. This is the place of blessing and fruitfulness. Jesus invites us to take His yoke upon us because it is well fitting, (this is what easy means in the Greek), and light, Matt 11.28.<br /><br />Zacchaeus laboured to enter that rest by climbing a tree. It changed his life. Peter laboured all night and caught nothing but then made an effort to obey the command of Jesus and caught a massive amount of fish. Too often our effort is misplaced. It is directed towards selfish goals or an expression of faith in our ability to do things without God. Don’t live that way. Make an effort to live in the promises of God.<br /><br />Choose to make an effort to live trusting God and entering into His rest. For the children of Israel this meant the Promised Land. That was their place of rest. Sadly few of them experienced the goal that God had for them. Unbelief robbed them of their true destiny. They died in the wilderness. But as men of faith Joshua and Caleb did enter in. They believed the promise of God and made the effort of letting that be their point of reference, not the walled cities of canaan or the giants in the land.<br /><br />What is your point of reference? What promise has God made to you that you are holding on to? What unbelief is being spoken by others that is designed by the enemy to rob you of your destiny? Will you give in or will you make every effort to hold on to the promise and enter what God has for you. Remember all the promises in Christ Jesus are yes and amen, 2Cor 1.20<br /><br />The third text is found in 2Tim 2.15 New Century Version<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Make every effort to give yourself to God as the kind of person he will approve. Be a worker who is not ashamed and who uses the true teaching in the right way.</span><br /><br />Various products in Britain need to be made to a specific standard of safety. Once this standard is achieved they are awarded a kite mark. It’s a sign that they have fulfilled the criteria required to earn this prestigious sign. They are approved. Wouldn’t it be great if we could see a kite mark on Christians, churches and leaders, to know that they too are approved?<br /><br />Often it takes time to see whom God has truly approved. Like the fruit on a tree it’s the last thing to appear. Paul was telling Timothy to make this his priority. That’s what David did. He was obedient to God because he sought God’s approval. Saul on the other hand sought the approval of the people. He became a slave to their desire and he disobeyed God. It cost him the kingdom.<br /><br />David on the other hand had a heart after God. It was His approval he chased. Even when he sinned he returned to the Lord and trusted in His forgiveness. This is vital for us to get right. In our culture we are obsessed with approval from every corner except heaven. <br /><br />TV producers determine the success of a programme based on ‘approval ratings’. No matter what intrinsic value a program may have it is cut from the schedule if it doesn’t hit the targets set by the station managers. Light entertainment has for the most part replaced serious documentary or news coverage.<br /><br />The same is true for music, films and theatre. Sometimes A class actors will put their names to a project because they know the film will not be made if they don’t. Peer pressure works on the same basis. We get approval from others and it is important to us. We bend to the expectations of others, often to our own hurt.<br /><br />But at the end of the day we will not stand before a TV audience or our peers or any human court. We will all stand before God. Ultimately it is His final verdict that makes all the difference. So Paul advises Timothy to live life in the light of that reality. For Timothy this meant pursuing excellence in ministry.<br /><br />All of us are aware of when someone is performing well and when a job is under par. When a singer hits a bad note we all hear it. When a carpenter makes a window that won’t fit the hole it’s meant to go in, it becomes obvious. Remember a skill is a practiced ability. <br /><br />What skills do you have that need to be taken to another level? Can you point to what you do with a sense of pride that it’s your best effort and it will gain a kite mark? Are you happy for others to look at and critique your work? A skilled craftsman is never afraid for their work to be inspected.<br /><br />But today we have ‘cowboy builders’, ‘knock offs’ and ‘pirate videos’. Quantity has become the substitute for quality. I think we are missing something. Now the danger is that we take this attitude into our churches and ministries. It will show in time. You can paper over the cracks but eventually they will show through.<br /><br />If you are involved in worship then you need to know the songs that you sing or the music that you play and know them well. The best way to learn them is by heart. Then you are free to minister while singing or playing without focusing on reading the words or music. They flow from your heart. And there is a flow.<br /><br />If you are a preacher then you need to prepare well. Use every opportunity to write down a good quote or a good illustration. Like any journey, know you destination. Read widely, pray fervently, prepare well and then deliver your message without apology. If you have to apologise before speaking it’s probably not worth even talking.<br /><br />My point is simple. Excellence attracts excellence. Skill is always admired. Seek to get God’s approval for all that you do in life and ministry and you will not feel ashamed when you stand before Him. Your work will be tested, 1Cor 3.13-16. If you’ve built with gold, silver and precious stones you will get the title AUG – Approved Unto God. There is no better accolade.<br /><br />Now developing skill takes effort. Yet when we connect with our passion the effort is a joy. I have a friend who is passionate about art. Her idea of fun is spending a day in London going around all the art galleries. When she paints time flies. She is making a huge effort but if you asked her she would say it is effortless. You see it’s her passion.<br /><br />Find your passion in life and ministry and then pursue it. David was a worshipper so when he wasn’t fighting battles he was writing songs and gained the title <span style="font-style:italic;">‘The Sweet Psalmist of Israel’</span>, 2Sam 23.1 NKJV.<br /><br />Make every effort to live a life of integrity, to enter into God’s promise for you and to pursue excellence. It will be worth it in the end. And heavens smile will be on your life.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-14970299262854116432011-09-03T09:10:00.000-07:002011-09-03T09:39:50.811-07:00Making Transitions<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-R3YQl8y2LD0/TmJVWb09VJI/AAAAAAAAARw/o2-oFCi-Xz0/s1600/Tranistions%2B3-09-11.jpeg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 225px; height: 225px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-R3YQl8y2LD0/TmJVWb09VJI/AAAAAAAAARw/o2-oFCi-Xz0/s320/Tranistions%2B3-09-11.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5648170726591386770" /></a>
<br />Change is inevitable. A person can start a new job, get married, move house, be made redundant or find they facing a tsunami. We’re never quite sure what tomorrow will bring. Change tends to focus on the external factors. The objective reality of what is happening to us; what we are going through.
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<br />But there is a subjective side to change; the internal process that determines how we feel about the change and our ability to embrace it. This side of change is best described as a period of transition.
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<br />Transitions signify the passage from one chapter of life to another. They can be marked by times of celebration or grief depending on how we choose to interpret what is happening to us.
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<br />The nation of Israel went through some very specific transitions. Five stand out in particular. Egypt, the wilderness, Canaan, Captivity and the return of the remnant. The wilderness was a special time for Israel. It was only an 11-day journey from there to the Promised Land – God’s objective for the people. Yet the nation spent forty years in this barren place. Why?
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<br />Deut 8.2-3 gives us some insight:
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<br />And you shall remember that the LORD your God led you all the way these forty years in the wilderness, to humble you and test you, to know what was in your heart, whether you would keep His commandments or not. So He humbled you, allowed you to hunger, and fed you with manna, which you did not know, nor did your fathers know, that He might make you know that man shall not live by bread alone; but man lives by every word that proceeds from the mouth of the LORD.</span>
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<br />The wilderness was a test; a place where Israel was humbled. There is nothing more humbling than to realise you are in a situation you have no power to control. God did that to the nation to teach them to depend on Him and look to Him. But this period is characterised in several places as being a time where they murmured and complained. They failed the test. They were not able to make the transition even though they had made the change!
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<br />And that is my point. Making a change is one thing. Making a transition well is quite another. This is why I believe that God ordained for Moses to be brought up in the house of Pharaoh. He did not grow up with a slave mentality. To be sure he needed to be delivered from self-sufficiency but he did not have a poverty mentality like the slaves in Egypt. God protected him from this crippling mind-set.
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<br />The Israelites were trapped in their thinking. Years of slavery had made the promise of a homeland too distant for them to embrace. But that is what faith does. It embraces the future now. Notice the emphasis of the Deut 8 text. They had to learn to live <span style="font-style:italic;">‘by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God’</span>. Moses phrases this sentence in the present tense.
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<br />God had spoken a promise in the past but now He was active in fulfilling that promise. He had come down to deliver them through Moses, Ex 3.7-10. He had a new word for them to embrace. A now word. Transitions work best when we embrace what God is saying now. Seven times in revelation 2-3 we are told to hear what the Spirit is saying (present tense again) to the churches. God speaks and He wants us to listen.
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<br />Think of one of the most important transitions in the Bible. Jesus has risen from the dead but is going back to heaven. How would the disciples cope? Walking with Jesus for three years, knowing Him personally, having Him there to rescue you from all your mistakes. That is what they had known. But now He was leaving.
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<br />Jesus anticipated their sorrow of heart. Listen to Him as He speaks to them in the upper room just before His death, John 16.5-7:
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<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">But now I go away to Him who sent Me, and none of you asks Me, ‘Where are You going?’ But because I have said these things to you, sorrow has filled your heart. Nevertheless I tell you the truth. It is to your advantage that I go away; for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to you; but if I depart, I will send Him to you.</span>
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<br />They were sorrowful but Jesus knew it was to their advantage that He left. He wasn’t abandoning them. He was preparing them for ministry that would more than multiply everything He had done through the empowering presence of the Spirit. It was a good thing He was leaving!
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<br />In Acts Luke records key events that help us understand the birth and mission of the church. Jesus spent forty days teaching the disciples things concerning the Kingdom. This was a post resurrection intensive training program! It culminated with the command for them to wait for the promise of the Father, Acts 1.1-9.
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<br />I notice two things about this time. He gave them information with the promise of an impartation. We need both. Good information helps us order and frame reality. It is rooted in knowledge, knowledge that was birthed in revelation. This is what we have in the Bible.
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<br />But Jesus also reminded them of a promise, first spoken of by John the Baptist four years earlier and now finding fulfilment in Jesus through His ascension. The promise was no longer years, months or weeks away. It was days ahead! He built their sense of anticipation. And so over the next ten days their faith grew.
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<br />They had heard about the Holy Spirit but now they were about to experience Him. He had been with them. Now He would be in them. Jesus left them in no doubt that this would be a power encounter and equip them for effective ministry, as if He were still personally present. Wow. This gives us all hope because we are 21-century believers. We haven’t walked with Jesus but we can be filled with the Holy Spirit and do the works of Jesus.
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<br />What was there response to this information and the promise of impartation? <span style="font-style:italic;">“They all continued with one accord in prayer and supplication….” Acts 1.14.</span> They prayed into the promise – together. Personal private prayer is important. But this was together. It was corporate prayer to see the fulfilment of a promise for the whole church. They made it a priority. They came to together. There were no ‘Lone Rangers’ on this team.
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<br />Transitions always work best when we have a promise to hold on to. Joshua and Caleb were different from the other spies who witnessed the same thing as them in Canaan. These two men were guided in their vision by the promise that God had already given them the land – long before any battles were fought. They nurtured the promise in their hearts and it was manifest in their confession.
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<br />Acts 2.1 tells us that when the day finally arrived, <span style="font-style:italic;">‘they were all with one accord in one place”.</span> The one accord continued over the ten days of waiting for the promise. And now Luke emphasises that they were all in one place. Transitions always work best when we do them together. Proverbs 18.1 says:<span style="font-style:italic;"> A man who isolates himself seeks his own desire; He rages against all wise judgment.</span>
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<br />The church is a body. We function best together. Of course you can have a personal relationship with God on your own but you can’t have church alone. It’s where two or three are gathered together. We need to be in one place. Thomas was not with the disciples when Jesus showed up the first time so he refused to believe He had risen, John 20.24.
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<br />The early church loved to gather together because they knew that God would show up in unusual ways when they did. And that is the consistent testimony of Acts. Some of the most difficult transitions I've had to make were made easier when I met to together to worship with other believers. It lifted my spirit. I was encouraged to move ahead in faith - and I did!
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<br />Think about some of the transitions that you are facing. Do you understand the topic? Have you read around it? Do you have all the information you need? Do you know what scripture says on this issue? Is there a promise that you are holding onto? A 'now word' from God that you expect to be fulfilled, not many days from now? Are you in ‘one accord’ with other believers? Finally do you take the opportunities you have to come together with others in ‘one place’?
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<br />If you do you will be far better positioned to handle any changes that come. Your heart will be ready to make more than a change. You’ll make a transition and do it well.
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<br />Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-15686923351721260562011-08-22T08:56:00.000-07:002011-08-22T09:34:27.352-07:00Largeness of Heart<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-elDJwhfMCw0/TlKC2CwMYtI/AAAAAAAAARo/eehq7QhxYWM/s1600/Sand%2Bon%2Bthe%2BSeashore.jpeg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 275px; height: 183px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-elDJwhfMCw0/TlKC2CwMYtI/AAAAAAAAARo/eehq7QhxYWM/s320/Sand%2Bon%2Bthe%2BSeashore.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5643717148012208850" /></a>
<br />Look at 1Kings 4.20,29
<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Judah and Israel were as numerous as the sand by the sea in multitude, eating and drinking and rejoicing.
<br />And God gave Solomon wisdom and exceedingly great understanding, and largeness of heart like the sand on the seashore.</span>
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<br />This is a summary of the establishment of Solomon as the new King of Israel. The people were happy. They were eating, drinking and rejoicing. It was a time of celebration. They were a numerous people, a multitude like, <span style="font-style:italic;">‘the sand by the sea’</span>.
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<br />Then later in the same chapter we read of God’s endowment to Solomon of wisdom and exceedingly great understanding and largeness of heart is also like <span style="font-style:italic;">‘the sand on the seashore’. </span>
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<br />A multitude of people needs a leader with a heart big enough to care for them and lead them. Solomon knew he was called to be King. It was his inheritance, his calling, and his destiny. But he was also acutely aware that he lacked experience and maturity, things that bring wisdom, 1Chron 22.5. In His prayer to God he cried out for the ability to judge and lead Israel well.
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<br />God answered his prayer by giving him largeness of heart. I am convinced that we need to learn to develop a multitude mentality. Jesus had compassion on the multitudes. He was never overwhelmed by the size of a crowd. Rather He demonstrated unflinching confidence in the Father’s ability to provide for them whatever they needed.
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<br />Sometimes His compassion moved Him to pray as in Matt 9.36. He saw that the people were like sheep without a shepherd. Here He was as the good shepherd but he knew that he needed others to care for the flock too. This was His commission to Peter in John 21 – feed my sheep.
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<br />And so in this text He told the disciples to pray to the Lord of the Harvest to send out labourers into the harvest. He wanted more shepherds who could care and feed the flock. The people were scattered and the heart of God is always to gather and include others.
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<br />Jesus said ‘How I longed to gather as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings but you were not willing'. A scattered flock is not God’s heart. Further Jesus had a heart that could receive all. It was large enough for all. John 3.16 says; <span style="font-style:italic;">'For God so loved the world’.</span> He had room in His heart for everyone.
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<br />Sometime Jesus was moved with compassion and He healed the multitudes as in Matt 14.14 In Mark 8.34 His compassion moved Him to teach the multitudes and then later in the same chapter He fed them. The Compassion of Jesus motivated each of these acts. It moved Him to action. His heart was stirred and He did something. He did not remain passive. He prayed, He healed, He taught, and He miraculously fed them.
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<br />This challenges me. I am persuaded that most churches are small because the heart of the leader is not big and in turn the heart of the congregation is small too. Imagine being part of the early church. You are part of the 120 disciples in the upper room. People who for the most part you have been with for three years. Others, like the siblings, James and John and Peter and Andrew you have known all your life.
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<br />Suddenly there is a mighty rushing wind and God comes. 3000 people are saved. Now your nice little group of people is ruined. Each person becomes responsible for caring for 25 new believers. But their heart was large enough to embrace this. They didn’t turn them away. Like Jesus they received them and cared for them – even if it meant selling houses or lands. Wow. Largeness of heart. It’s what helps us reach the world.
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<br />There is a lot written about revival these days. Great. I’m for that. But my observation of many believers is that they are clueless as to what revival will mean for them if it comes. It will mean you have to open your home to more people. People who may not be like you. People you may not normally choose to associate with. People outside your social network. People whose needs may mean you need to make significant sacrifices for. Do you really want that?
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<br />Too often we focus on programs. These are good. They have their place. But people run programs. And Jesus focused His prayers on labourers for the Harvest. In the context of Matt 9 he is looking for those who have a heart to care for the sheep. Those with a desire to lead the way He does, fearlessly, confidently with the good of the people in mind. Leadership that gathers. The very word church means gathered assembly.
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<br />In 2Cor 6 Paul speaks to the Corinthians about their attitude of heart Listen to his words:
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<br />O Corinthians! We have spoken openly to you, our heart is wide open. You are not restricted by us, but you are restricted by your own affections. Now in return for the same (I speak as to children), you also be open.</span>
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<br />Paul had a big heart. It was wide open to these people. But they were not reciprocating. Their hearts were closed. JB Phillips puts it like this: <span style="font-style:italic;">“We are hiding nothing from you and our hearts are absolutely open to you”.</span>
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<br />Think of John 3.16. <span style="font-style:italic;">'For God so loved the world…'</span> What a heart. Big enough to take in all the peoples of the world. And the heart of Jesus is like that. He never turned people away. He received all who came to Him. His heart is big. And if we are to be like Jesus then our hearts need to be enlarged too. But it is a choice!
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<br />John talks of those who see a brother in need and shut up their heart to him. He asks a question. <span style="font-style:italic;">“How does the love of God dwell in him?” 1John 3.17</span>. Largeness of heart creates generosity of spirit. Without it we become miserly, self-serving, isolated and fearful of others.
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<br />Largeness of heart enables us to do the uncomfortable and the inconvenient without complaining. Largeness of heart increases our capacity for wisdom and understanding. We become more discerning. People are afraid that they will be ripped off if they are generous. But Solomon had great wisdom. Nobody got the better of him. He ruled with wisdom and Israel flourished under his leadership. They became a multitude.They grew.
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<br />This is God’s heart for the church. He wants it to grow. He wants to add to the church daily. But we need hearts that are big enough to work together with God for the good of His purposes; to embrace what He wants to do.
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<br />Largeness of heart is never threatened by the success of others. Think of John who saw someone delivering people from demons but he wasn’t part of Jesus company of followers. John forbade him. He wanted to protect Jesus’ franchise. Listen to the generosity of spirit coming from Jesus:
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<br /> <span style="font-style:italic;">“Do not forbid him, for he who is not against us is on our side”, Luke 9.50.</span>
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<br />Imagine that. Someone else doing what Jesus and the apostles did but not part of their company and Jesus affirmed his ministry. That’s largeness of heart. What would happen if pastors in a local area began to cheer one another on when a new church was planted or someone else was having success?
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<br />Instead of being jealous or insecure about loosing people pastors rejoiced and blessed what God was doing. But my experience tells me this is the exception not the rule. Why? Smallness of heart. Something needs to change!
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<br />People with largeness of heart are discerning without being judgemental. In Luke 9 a Samaritan village refused to accept the ministry of Jesus because He had set His face to go on to Jerusalem. Perhaps they wanted Jesus just for themselves. Perhaps the animosity between the Samaritans and Jews made them resentful that He would go on to minister to them too. Whatever the reason they said no.
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<br />James and John got mad. The sons of thunder went into judgement mode. Not only that, they used scripture to justify their judgmental attitude towards these Samaritans. Listen to them. We are talking genocide here, all in the name of Jesus.
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<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">“And when His disciples James and John saw this, they said, “Lord, do You want us to command fire to come down from heaven and consume them, just as Elijah did?” But He turned and rebuked them, and said, “You do not know what manner of spirit you are of. For the Son of Man did not come to destroy men’s lives but to save them.” And they went to another village, Luke 9.54-56.</span>
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<br />Jesus is straight. <span style="font-style:italic;">'You have the wrong spirit guys'</span> - my paraphrase. Largeness of heart keeps you from being offended by others. Jesus wasn’t. He respected their decision and moved on. How do you handle it when people don’t respond the way you would like them to? Do you get offended and then find a Bible verse to justify your ‘righteous indignation’?
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<br />Jesus is on the business of saving people not condemning them. That is another spirit, one the Pharisees were well practiced in. Self-righteousness does not produce largeness of heart. Only responding to God’s compassion can do that. I have read some very disingenuous statements abut Mother Teresa from evangelicals because she was a catholic. But I have been to Calcutta. I have read her journal. I was impressed by her love and devotion to Jesus. It manifested itself through her love for homeless children. She took in thousands because she had largeness of heart. I admire her.
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<br />Why not pray a dangerous prayer this week. Ask God to give you largeness of heart like the sand on the seashore. Ask Him to take you on a journey where your capacity is increased. Dare to do something this week that takes you out of your comfort zone. Something that shows your heart is getting bigger.
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<br />I have a retired couple in my church. They are amazing. Their son is a pastor and has planted churches in Africa. They have a nice home. I asked them to take in an intern from our church. This is a young man who has recently graduated from Bible College but was looking for ministry experience. I asked them to give him board and keep. They did it for a whole year, willingly, unselfishly, and joyfully. I call that largeness of heart.
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<br />And we as a church have been richly blessed, by them, by him, by God. They weren’t sure at first but they took a step of faith. They have largeness of heart. Give me a hundred more people like that and I could build a church of a thousand.
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<br />Smallness is good – as long as we don’t stay small. In life we begin as single cell, but we don’t stay that way. When we are born we are tiny, but we don’t stay that way. When we plant an acorn it is small but it doesn’t stay that way. Life brings growth – with all its associated problems.
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<br />The Kingdom of God begins as a mustard seed. Small and apparently insignificant. But it grows. It becomes a mighty tree that even the birds of the air can nest in Matt 13.31-32. We should celebrate this and welcome it and prepare our hearts to embrace it. How big is your heart? Who is God challenging you to embrace? What will you do to become a big-hearted person? Dare to ask the Lord to give largeness of heart.
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<br />Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-90558294937795724552011-08-15T02:37:00.000-07:002011-08-15T03:12:00.474-07:00Working Heartily for the Lord<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-mBFLdEGY2XE/Tkjtqm1OLLI/AAAAAAAAARY/xXVqsdjov5Y/s1600/craftsman%2B1.jpeg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 273px; height: 185px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-mBFLdEGY2XE/Tkjtqm1OLLI/AAAAAAAAARY/xXVqsdjov5Y/s320/craftsman%2B1.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5641019849515609266" /></a>
<br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Six days shall you labour …… Ex 20.9<span style="font-style:italic;"></span></span>
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<br />Rest is important, but the greater part of our time is given over to work. This is not always paid work either. The mother who is a home builder works. The countless volunteers in numerous charities work. Every day we meet people who work.
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<br />Jesus said, <span style="font-style:italic;">“My Father has been working until now and I have been working”, John 5.17.</span>
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<br />He went on to say, <span style="font-style:italic;">“I must work the works of Him that sent Me ….”, John 9.4</span>
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<br />Both the Father and the Son work! They work according to a purpose, a goal. They have an aim in view. That is how it should be for us too. We are yoked to Jesus in order to do His works and that is not just the stuff we do on Sunday! Every day is an opportunity to do His will right where you work. Jesus delighted to do the work of the Father, every day of His life.
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<br />Creation itself is a reflection of God’s handiwork. He works. He creates. He expresses something of His own glory through creation. As the scripture says in Psalm 19.1-4 NIV,
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<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">The heavens declare the glory of God;
<br />And the firmament shows His handiwork.
<br />Day unto day utters speech,
<br />And night unto night reveals knowledge.
<br />There is no speech nor language
<br />Where their voice is not heard.
<br />Their line has gone out through all the earth,
<br />And their words to the end of the world.</span>
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<br />Creation speaks to us. Its language is universal. Every culture has the capacity to understand that it points to a creator of infinite power, Rom 1.20. God’s creation points back to Him.
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<br />In the same way what we do points back to us. It’s not difficult to recognise a painting by Van Gogh or to recognise an impressionist work of art. For years the unique and distinctive designs of Frank Lloyd Wright dominated architecture in America. With each of these men their work pointed back to them. This is why Jesus could say: <span style="font-style:italic;">“Believe Me that I am in the Father and the Father in Me, or else believe Me for the sake of the works themselves”, John 14.11.</span>
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<br />To believe in the work of the Saviour is to believe in the Saviour. So what we do is important. It is not distant from who we are as people. It is, in part, a reflection of who we are!
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<br />Take a look at Col 3.22-24 NIV:
<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Slaves, obey your earthly masters in everything; and do it, not only when their eye is on you and to curry their favour, but with sincerity of heart and reverence for the Lord. Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for human masters, since you know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the Lord Christ you are serving.</span>
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<br />Let’s unpack this a little. First some background. Slaves were prolific throughout the Roman Empire. The Emperor had 250,000 slaves. Every household wanted slaves. They were productive and the more you had the more it became a social status within the community. Slaves were treated well on the whole, after all they were a financial investment. If you buy a new car you make sure it is serviced! Slaves were given food and board and some money. Over a lifetime, if they excelled, it was possible for them to buy their own freedom.
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<br />Imagine being a slave and coming to faith in Jesus. Now you have dignity in Christ. You hear Paul teach that there is no longer Jew or Greek, male or female, slave or free. Wow! The old distinctions have gone – in Christ. And yet Rome doesn’t recognise this great truth. What do you do?
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<br />Paul begins by reframing the life and work of a slave. He lifts it from the ordinary and mundane to the spiritual and significant. Now this is important for us because many people feel trapped in jobs they don't like. The obligation of family and a mortgage keep them there. Let’s hear what Paul has to say and take his points in reverse order.
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<br />1. You serve the Lord Christ. Imagine that. Not Rome. Not your master/employer. Not Caesar, but Jesus – the Lord Christ. If that was true then for slaves how much more is it true for us as believers in the 21 Century. Think about the change in attitude such a perspective could bring both to the worker and the organisation they work for. And that is the point. Paul wants to change their inner world by changing their view of reality. He wants them and us to see things from a divine perspective.
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<br />Imagine the change that could happen to our world if instead of waking up on a Monday morning and heading off to work at Ford’s or the bank or the university or MacDonald’s or the hospital, instead you saw yourself going to work for Jesus! He is not just our Saviour. We learn from scripture that all things were made by Him and for Him. His creativity is boundless. And as you serve Him, he has the power to help you be creative right where you are.
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<br />2. At the end of the week you receive a payment, money, thanks appreciation of some kind. But Paul says Jesus has reserved for us an inheritance. That’s a lot more than a wage. If we work with a good attitude of heart, as if we were doing it for Jesus, then He will reward us. He is not unjust. We serve a higher master. Our boss in Heaven notices everything and He will repay us for our labour.
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<br />3. The danger with serving any person is that we can make judgements about what we consider fair or reasonable. By seeing ourselves as serving Jesus Paul raises the stakes. Now it’s not just a question of working hard when we are being observed but working hard all the time. We are there to give it our best because even though our human boss may not be worth it, Jesus is.
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<br />God doesn’t want you to develop into a man-pleaser. He is looking for a deeper commitment through a deeper understanding of who we truly are in Christ and whom we truly serve. The opposite of eye-service is heart service. Our work is to be from the heart, heartily. This means that we do something without restraint. We are vigorous. We give our best. In time this produces excellence. Excellence begins with an attitude. That is how Olympic champions are made. They commit to a process where they give everything and in time they become the best. Excellence is the consequence of doing things with all your heart.
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<br />Listen to Proverbs 22.29 in the Message version: <span style="font-style:italic;">"Observe people who are good at their work - skilled workers are always in demand and admired they don’t take a back seat to anyone".</span>
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<br />A Skill is competent excellence in performance. It is always noticed. It is seldom passed over. The reason is that bosses love hard workers. They are productive and help organisations to succeed and grow. Even unbelievers recognise the value of such a person. Think of how Joseph was promoted by Potiphar. He ruled over his entire estate. When thrown into prison he was again promoted so that all were under his care and management.
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<br />Even Jesus learned a trade. He was a skilled carpenter. All those years of obscurity were part of His preparation for ministry. They were significant and they counted. Before David became a King he kept sheep. His commitment to care for them is what qualified him to care for God’s people. He risked his life to protect them from the lion and the bear! This was the mark of a true shepherd according to Jesus – he gives his life for the sheep.
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<br />Working heartily is also about working joyfully. Psalm 100.2 says; <span style="font-style:italic;">“Serve the Lord with gladness”.</span> If we are serving the Lord at work then we should be able to bring an attitude of joy into the work place. This isn’t difficult. Smile at people when you meet them. Smile when you talk on the phone – it makes a difference. We can’t always change our circumstances or our job but we can always change our attitude.
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<br />The fruit of the Spirit is Joy. You can bring joy even into the workplace when you serve from your heart. Remember joy is rooted in inner contentment. It is not affected by the circumstance of life.
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<br />4. Finally Paul says, <span style="font-style:italic;">“Whatever you do…”</span> That sounds very comprehensive to me – whatever you do! No area of life is meant to be outside of the blessing of God. Our work life demands many things of us. Some things may go beyond the remit of what you feel able to do. Some may seem too menial for the level of training and qualifications you have. Knowing that you are doing this for Jesus can change the value of what you do. This is not done for men, it’s done for Him.
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<br />Jesus was not afraid to wash feet. In the first century this was the most menial task given to the newest slave. Nobody wanted to do it. But Jesus did it because He placed a different value on the men He was serving. I have found in life that there are things I like to do and things I have to do. I naturally gravitate to the things I like. But self-discipline has helped me to do the things I have to. In time I saw these as having value too. Embracing humble tasks can send a powerful message.
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<br />Proverbs 18.9 in the Message version says: <span style="font-style:italic;">Slack habits and sloppy work are as bad as vandalism. </span>That has bite to it. Vandalism is the wanton destruction of property or goods. None of us appreciate it. It is costly to any community. But the wisdom of Solomon tells us that slack habits and sloppy work are just as bad. At root there is a similar attitude – “It doesn’t matter”, and ‘Who cares!”
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<br />Paul is helping us see that God cares and it does matter. In Rom 12.11 KJV he writes:<span style="font-style:italic;"> “Not slothful in business, fervent in spirit, serving the Lord”.</span> Notice the contrast; slothful or fervent. The word fervent comes form a Greek word meaning to apply heat. It was used when water was boiled. This is what we are to bring to our tasks at work, fervency.
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<br />And it’s worth remembering that someone who works in this way creates an environment that is infectious. Happy, hard working people impact the attitude of others. You actually have the power to change your work environment. It may take time but you do reap what you sow.
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<br />Proverbs 10.4 tells us;<span style="font-style:italic;"> “The hand of the diligent makes rich”. </span>And Proverbs 12.24 says; <span style="font-style:italic;">“The hand of the diligent shall bear rule”. </span>In other words prosperity, productivity and promotion go to those who are diligent. To be diligent is to be hardworking and conscientious in what you do. The dictionary says it is to be attentive and persistent in doing anything.
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<br />Think about your life and what you will be doing this week. What tasks lie ahead for you? Can you see yourself performing these tasks for the Lord? What attitude do you need to change to feel good about doing this job? What skills do you need to take to a new level to be better at what you do? At the end of the day who are you working for? My prayer is that you will find a new freedom and joy in what you do as you pursue excellence in serving the Lord.
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<br />Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-67765296932489133922011-07-14T00:31:00.000-07:002011-07-19T03:04:16.869-07:00Baptised in His Name<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-XDtLcCmCibo/Th76C_nvljI/AAAAAAAAARQ/GxX9PCN9wK0/s1600/Immersed.jpeg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 255px; height: 197px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-XDtLcCmCibo/Th76C_nvljI/AAAAAAAAARQ/GxX9PCN9wK0/s320/Immersed.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5629211513604511282" /></a><br />Matt 28.18 is a record of the last words of Jesus to His disciples before His ascension into Heaven.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">And Jesus came and spoke to them, saying, "All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth. Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age." Amen.</span><br /><br />This is called the great commission. It is rooted in His authority, the undisputed authority that Jesus now has in heaven and on earth. With this authority He commissions His disciples and all future generations of believers to go and make disciples, the primary purpose for why we are here. The process begins with Baptism. This word means to submerge, to dunk, to immerse, to plunge or to put into. Tanners used the word to describe how they dyed material. <br /><br />It was practised by John and Jesus and the early church in Acts. It became a prophetic symbol of passing from an old life into a new one. In that sense it represented both a bath and a burial. As a bath it washes away the sins of the past and brings cleansing so that we can go on to serve God. As a burial it lays to rest the old crucified life that has no power to please God or do His will. Finally it celebrates the resurrection. Just as we are buried with Christ we are raised with Him in newness of life, Rom 6.4-5. Baptism marks the entrance into that new life, which is why the early church did this as close to a persons profession of faith as possible.<br /><br />The general rule was, believe and be baptised. But Jesus says this baptism is into the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Now in the Bible to do something in the name of someone else is to act on their behalf, to use their authority so to speak. Jesus is commanding His disciples to get people fully immersed and put into God's authority, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. I'd like to unpack that a little and take it in reverse order.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">1. Put into the authority of the Holy Spirit</span><br /><br />In Acts 1.8 Jesus said, <span style="font-style:italic;">"But you shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be witnesses to Me in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth."</span><br />Jesus is clear. The Holy Spirit was given to empower us to witness. He is a missional Spirit, testifying to the world of Jesus' beauty, His glory, His majesty, His supremacy, His power to forgive, save and heal. <br /><br />As we see this played out in the book of Acts it is clear that this empowerment gave the early disciples an amazing confidence in the face of extreme opposition. These people were fearless. So being filled with the Spirit became an important criteria for choosing future leaders in the church, Acts 6.3. The apostles knew that the church must be led by people who had experienced this empowering presence to witness to the name of Jesus.<br /><br />When the church is filled with the Spirit we should expect to see an increase in mission through personal testimony, prophecy and preaching that gets results. Confidence to share our personal journey with others is crucial. But this immersion into the Spirit also opens the door to move in the gifts of the Spirit. So we should also expect to see signs and wonders too.<br /><br />1Cor 12 gives us a list of nine manifestation gifts. My experience leads me to believe these are available situationally to all the saints. In other words all can be sent but not all are apostles. All can prophecy but not all are prophets. All can testify and share their testimony but not all are evangelists.<br /><br />There is a difference between gift, ministry and office. Those who regularly move in a gift can develop, over time, that gift into a ministry. Over time this too can establish them in an office. But it all begins with the exercise of a gift. The first gift manifested in Acts 2 was prophecy. Pentecostals may take issue with me here and argue it was the gift of tongues. Consider this:<br /><br />a) Peter's explanation to those listening and wondering what what was going on was to quote Joel 2 - <span style="font-style:italic;">Your sons and your daughters shall prophecy.</span><br /><br />b) The men who heard the disciples speak heard them speak in fifteen known languages. The disciples spoke languages they had never learned, declaring to these visitors in Jerusalem <span style="font-style:italic;">the wonderful works of God</span> - that's prophecy.<br /><br />c) Prophecy is the primary gift that Paul exhorts the church in Corinth to go after because it speaks directly into the hearts of people bringing conviction and conversion, 1Cor 14.1; 24-25.<br /><br />d) No interpretation was needed in Acts 2. Each man heard his own language and understood what was said.<br /><br />When Paul speaks of the gift of tongues he says it a number of things:<br /><br />a) It is for personal edification unless interpreted, 1Cor 14.4<br /><br />b) It is not directed primarily to men but to God, 1Cor 14.2<br /><br />c) God understands the mysteries he speaks but men don't, 1Cor 14.2<br /><br />d) The one who speaks in tongues does not understand what he says but he is still edified because unlike those who may hear him, his spirit is connected to what he says, 1Cor 14.14-15 <br /><br />We tend to think that tongues plus interpretation equals prophecy. I think we have made a mistake. Paul indicates that prayer in tongues is directed to God. So when it is interpreted we get an understanding of what a person is saying to God. We normally call that prayer, not prophecy.<br /><br />But my point is that the Holy Spirit is a missional Spirit who empowers us to witness and gives us gifts to do this effectively. Too often we have used these as a test of how good or spiritual a meeting was rather than seeing that Jesus moved in gifts of the Spirit to speak into the heart of Nathanial, the Samaritan woman, Peter and Judas, none of which were in formal meetings! <br /><br />When we give a greater emphasis to gifts being exercised in meetings rather than as a natural part of life then, over time, we become inward looking. Like John Wimber used to say, the meeting place is the training place for the market place. But he was careful to do most of his training of the saints at specific conferences rather than Sunday gatherings.<br /><br />Finally the Holy Spirit is given to transform our character into Christ likeness. He wars against the flesh, Gal 5.16-18. It is not enough to have gifts, we need fruit. And fruit takes more time to develop, but we should expect it and look for it. Jesus ordained us to bring forth fruit, John 15.5. The more we are immersed into the Holy Spirit the more His fruit will develop in us. This immersion comes through the daily choices we make to respond to His conviction. Each positive response takes us deeper into God. And so we are transformed, from glory to glory, 1Cor 3.18.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">2. Put into the authority of the Son</span><br /><br />To be put into Jesus is to recognise that we now have a new boss. Our lives are no longer self directed. Jesus Christ is Lord is a declaration of a new King. And His kingdom reign begins in the lives of His followers - you and me. Discipleship is about trusting Jesus more and more with all your major life decisions. We cannot truly pray, <span style="font-style:italic;">"Your Kingdom come, Your will be done",</span> Matt 6.10, unless we are surrendered in our hearts to the Lordship of Jesus.<br /><br />There is a paradox here. You might think that to surrender your will to that of another is to loose yourself. Your identity becomes subsumed. You become a pushover for every manipulating control freak. Given the events of history there is some legitimacy for this concern. Jim Jones and the Jonestown community along with David Koresh are just two examples of recent history that should give cause for concern.<br /><br />I find it helpful to look at Jesus and His relationship with the Father. Consider this:<br /><br />a) Jesus prayed, <span style="font-style:italic;">"Let this cup pass from Me, nevertheless, not as I will, but as You will", Matt 26.39</span><br />The surrender of His will was very specific. It was a surrender to the purpose and plan of the Father. In saying yes to this He was strengthened to fulfil that purpose. It is the same for us. To accept that Jesus is now Lord means we surrender to His plan and purpose. It actually empowers us to be all that God intended. We become more ourselves, not less.<br /><br />b) When the enemy tried to temp Jesus to act outside of the will of the Father He fought back with scripture, Matt 4.4. We never surrender the right to test things by God's word. The Bereans tested everything Paul said and Luke commends them for it, Acts 17.11. We don't blindly follow leaders. We examine the fruit of their life and ministry. We test their words against God's word. If it conforms then like the Thessalonians we can say we have heard God speak through them, 1Thess 2.13.<br /><br />c) Surrendering to the Lordship of Jesus is an act of trust. It is believing that He will only bring into our life what has been filtered through His love. Things may touch us that bring pain but God is bigger than all of that and His ultimate goal is to do us good. Unless we can embrace this truth we will hold back and try to maintain control in some way. It never works out well.<br /><br />When we are baptised into Christ we are baptised into His body. We can't be part of Jesus and not be part of His church. I now find myself part of a community, the community of the King. In that community I learn what it means to serve others. Jesus the Lord shows us that washing feet has value. We don't need to be status driven. We can be Spirit led.<br /><br />In this community we learn to practice unselfish living. Notice that Jesus called twelve men to 'be with Him'. It was life related, not just meetings. Jesus wants to teach us how to do life together. This is where our attitudes are challenged and shaped. This is where we learn what servant leadership looks like. It all takes place in the body.<br /><br />Here too I can learn my role, the part that I need to play. Eph 4.16 says that the body grows as 'every joint supplies'. To be put into the authority of the Son is to learn that I am called and unique. I have a part to share that helps to build the body. 1Cor 12.12 says that the body is made up of many members. There is a unity and a diversity. Unity of Spirit and diversity of ministry.<br /><br />In Him I can fully know my call and through His grace I can fulfil that call.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">3. Put into the authority of the Father</span><br /><br />When Jesus was baptised a number of significant things happened. A dove descended from Heaven, symbolising the presence of the Spirit. Heaven opened. Then a voice came saying, <span style="font-style:italic;">"This is My beloved Son in whom I am well pleased", Matt 3.17.</span><br /><br />Think about that. Before Jesus had preached one message, done any miracles, spoken forgiveness to people, trained disciples or driven out any demons He received this validation from the Father in Heaven. Amazing! We tend to commend people for what they accomplish. The Father commended Jesus for who He was first. That's how it should be.<br /><br />Have you ever watched a parent with a new born? The words, the smiles the look give it all away. This child is loved because it is theirs. The Father loves us because we love His son. Through Jesus we are now part of the family. We must get this right. Ministry must flow from a deep conviction that we are loved, before we do anything. Without that we end up trying hard to prove our worth. It corrupts the gospel into a works program.<br /><br />There has been much teaching in the past twenty five years on the subject of God's Father heart. And rightly so. I grew up with a father who was never able to look at me and say 'I love you'. It's not that he didn't. It's that he came from a generation that didn't know how. It wasn't considered manly. But that lack of affirmation left a hole in me. It left me striving to accomplish things. This did indeed get his attention and commendation but left an inprint in me, "My value lies in what I do more than who I am". This fundamental insecurity can then be transfered to our image of God. It is hard to overcome.<br /><br />"What if I fail?" What if I don't do enough?" And so we can get caught up with striving to be accepted, by God, by others, by ourselves. To be immersed into the Father is to know that you are beloved, period. It's not about what you do. It's about who you are - in Him. Fully accepted, fully loved, dignified to bear the family name - son of God.<br /><br />In John 20.17 Jesus gave Mary a message to speak to His disciples. <span style="font-style:italic;">"I am ascending to My Father and your Father and to My God and your God".</span><br />This was a radical change of status for them. Now they had access to the Father, their Father, our Father.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">John 16.26-27, "In that day you will ask in My name, and I do not say to you that I shall pray the Father for you; for the Father Himself loves you, because you have loved Me, and have believed that I came forth from God".</span> <br /><br />We can come to the Father and know that He hears us in the same way He hears Jesus. My prayers count. They matter. They have impact. My life counts. He watches over me delighting in who I am, not just what I do.<br /><br />Finally in John 14.7-9 we read: <span style="font-style:italic;">"If you had known Me, you would have known My Father also; and from now on you know Him and have seen Him." Philip said to Him, "Lord, show us the Father, and it is sufficient for us." Jesus said to him, "Have I been with you so long, and yet you have not known Me, Philip? He who has seen Me has seen the Father; so how can you say, 'Show us the Father'? </span><br /><br />Jesus points out a reality that Philip and the other disciples seem to have missed. To know Jesus is to know the Father. He is the full expression of the Father. To use Paul's language, <span style="font-style:italic;">For in Him all the fullness of the Godhead dwells bodily, Col 1.19; 2.9.</span><br /><br />But this is true of us too. Not as individuals but as His body - together, Eph 1.23. The body is the fullness of Christ. Just as He reflected the heart of the Father so we too, in the body, can reflect the heart of God. They are one! To be immersed in the Father increases our capacity to reflect His heart to the world. And this is how we make disciples. We must immerse people from every tribe, tongue and ethnic group into the authority of the Godhead, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.<br /><br />People who are filled with God are easier to teach and lead. Think of your life and ask yourself which areas do you need a fresh immersion. You see baptism is an event. Water is used. The symbolism is powerful. Grace can be imparted through this. But it is also a process where we can go deeper into God. Where do you need to go deeper in God?Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-89295117938570448402011-05-10T08:05:00.000-07:002011-05-21T06:38:12.168-07:00Casablanca<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-AKcrTGX-J5Q/Tc97wk7f6yI/AAAAAAAAAQ8/RnJtCDNwDlg/s1600/Casablanca%2B3.jpeg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 260px; height: 194px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-AKcrTGX-J5Q/Tc97wk7f6yI/AAAAAAAAAQ8/RnJtCDNwDlg/s320/Casablanca%2B3.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5606836135576726306" /></a><br />The screenplay for Casablanca came from a play entitled <span style="font-style:italic;">Everybody Comes to Rick's</span> based on the travels of Murray Burnett, when, in 1938, he took a trip to aid Jewish relatives in occupied Vienna. Julius and Philip Epstein wrote a large part of the script for the movie and are widely recognised for contributing the witty dialogue. Another writer, Howard Koch, sharpened the political plot. Although he did not receive a writer's credit, Casey Robinson deepened the love story, filling out Ilsa's relationship to Victor and building up the piano player Sam's role as the witness to Rick and Ilsa's passion.<br /><br />America entered the war after Pearl Harbour happened on 7 Dec 1941. This movie was made in 1942 when the U.S. was suffering in the Pacific and Allied victory seemed far from certain. Throughout the film, the wars outcome is in question. Casablanca is a place of anxiety and uncertainty. The first time we see Rick in the movie he is signing a credit note and the date is 2 Dec 1941, five days before Pearl Harbour. It becomes apparent that one of the key themes in this movie is that when it comes to love or war, you can't remain neutral forever. <br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">0.01.10 - 0.02.15 - Introduction</span><br />The film begins and ends with the playing of La Marseillaise, the French National anthem. So the political situation in Europe frames the whole film. Within the first minute of the movie we understand that Casablanca is a place that people pass through on their way to America. There they hope for a better life! Most expatriates in Casablanca are in transit, except for Rick who owns and runs the stylish nightclub and casino, <span style="font-style:italic;">'Rick's Cafe Americain'</span>. People go there to forget their troubles or gamble for enough money to buy a way of escaping to Lisbon. From there they can fly to America and begin their new life. <br /><br />During this period Casablanca was a French colony in North Africa. It was part of 'unoccupied France'. France itself was invaded in May 1940 and the Germans set up the Vichy government. Thus France became divided between those who collaborated and those who resisted, (known as the 'French Resistance'). This situation is also reflected in the movie.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">0.16.38 - 0.19.25 - Rick the Cynic</span><br />In this scene we see Rick talking with Louis, the prefect of Police who announces that an arrest is going to take place in his Cafe and he must not act to protect the person. The exchange is telling and shows that the movie is also a political allegory:<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Rick: I stick my neck out for nobody<br />Louise: A wise foreign policy</span><br /><br />At the beginning of the movie Rick appears cynical and detached. Yet whilst he presents himself as having no interest in the problems of people or issues that are going on in the world, yet when the name of Victor Laszlo is mentioned by Louis he is obviously impressed. Laszlo is a famous freedom fighter who escaped from a Nazi concentration camp. Now he is arriving in Casablanca with a beautiful woman, much to the delight of the womanising Prefect.<br /><br />At one point we see Rick take money from his safe. The director Michael Curtiz focuses on the shadow of Rick. Through this technique he is implying that Rick is now a shadow of the man he used to be. Yet, in Casablanca, he is the one person people tend to trust, because they know that with Rick they will get a fair deal. He delivers on his promises, but he's careful not to promise much!<br /><br />In this early part of the movie we meet a Rick who does quite act according to his own professed beliefs. What he is truly passionate about leaks through from time to time. But most of the time he presents himself as cold and detached, caring for no-one but himself. For us watching, the issue is, 'why is he like this?' 'What happened to make him this way?' <br /><br />When Victor and Ilsa arrive we begin to understand. <br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">0.42.30 - 0.45.53 - Rick the Hopeful Romantic</span><br />In a drunken stupor, while Sam plays <span style="font-style:italic;">"As Time Goes By"</span> Rick begins to remember 20 months earlier when he and Ilsa knew each other in Paris. The song is clearly their song. This flashback shows us scenes of a couple deeply in love and for the first time we hear the immortal line from Humphrey Bogart, who plays Rick; <span style="font-style:italic;">"Here's looking at you kid"</span>. <br /><br />Rick here is called Richard by Ilsa. The change in name implies a change in the man. In Paris we meet a very carefree and happy Rick. At the conclusion of the scene Rick is waiting at the station for Ilsa, whom he wants to marry. She doesn't come and all he has is a note that declares her love for him, but says they can never be together.<br /><br />Rick is wanted by the German's and so has no choice but to leave Paris. The rain falls on the note and washes away the words. This too is a powerful metaphor for how all his dreams for this relationship have been washed away, in a moment. As he boards the train he screws up the note throwing it away. Nothing is left for him. No explanation. No hope. No future.<br /><br />Sometimes in life people disappoint us. They seem to renege on a promise or let us down in some way. This can be hurtful. But it is still possible to suspend judgement until we have all the facts. In the Bible we have the story of Lazarus in John 11. Interestingly Laszlo and Lazarus have the same meaning in the Greek; God has helped. Perhaps the screen writer is making an intentional inference here.<br /><br />When the Biblical character Lazarus was sick his sisters, well known to Jesus, called for Him to come and heal their brother. Jesus delayed His coming and their brother died. They felt let down. No explanation. No hope. No future for Lazarus, this side of the final judgment. But Jesus loved this family. He genuinely cared. And when He finally came He raised Lazarus from the dead. His actions at the beginning made the two sisters wonder how much He truly loved them. In the end they were left in no doubt.<br /><br />Perhaps someone has let you down badly. Suspend judgment. Our minds tend to think the worst. Find out the facts first. Once you know the truth you are in a position to decide how to respond. If necessary, choose to forgive the other person from your heart. It will release you from your pain and enable you to move on.<br /><br />Two more meetings ensue between Rick and Ilsa. Rick learns that Ilsa is in fact the wife of Victor Laszlo and was, even when they were together in Paris. The only way for the Laszlo's to escape is for Rick to sell them the letters of transit that were entrusted to him earlier in the movie. Rick refuses.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">1.17.55 - 1.21.07 - Rick's Resentment Resolved</span><br />In this scene the desperate Ilsa comes to Rick's apartment and does all she can to persuade him to give her the letters of transit. She even pulls a gun on him demanding he hand them over. Rick refuses and invites her to shoot,<span style="font-style:italic;"> "You'll be doing me a favour"</span>, such is the depth of his pain. At this point she breaks down and reveals the reason she left him in Paris. She thought that her husband, who had been captured by the Nazi's and sent to a concentration camp, was dead. On the day they were due to leave Paris she found out that Victor was alive. <br /><br />Rick listens patiently and makes this telling observation; <span style="font-style:italic;">"It's still a story without an ending"</span>. Ilsa is in the same dilemma again. Only this time she feels powerless to choose between Rick and her husband Victor. So she puts the outcome in Rick's hands. The only question we are left with now is, "What will Rick do?"<br /><br />I find a strong resonance with Rick's statement; <span style="font-style:italic;">"It's still a story without an ending".</span> He is of course referring to Ilsa and the choice that must be made by someone. But it also hints to the outcome of the war, which at that time was not known. The ending would largely depend on the choices people would make. Would they act out of self interest, as Rick purports is his approach to life; or will the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few. Will we see choices made out of self-sacrifice for a higher good?<br /><br />In a way the gospel is about God's refusal to let the story of His creation end in tragedy. He does not abandon us to our waywardness and self will. Rather, through love, impassioned reckless love, He makes it possible for us all to experience a new ending. His love is expressed through the best known verse of the Bible, John 3.16.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">For God so loved the world, He gave His only begotten Son that whosoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life.</span><br /><br />We sometimes feel that God has let us down. But there is nothing fake about His love. It embraces becoming human, becoming a servant, becoming obedient to death. It embraces the shame and blood of the cross because of a vision of a better future for humanity.<br /><br />Faith connects us to this new destiny. It is a new script, a new life, a new ending. In Jesus we can find forgiveness for sin and a new beginning. Faith is a special kind of choice. It does not rely on information or learning. It is not impressed with the standing, qualifications or noble birth of others. Rather it connects with something deep within each of us. It is a response to truth that we sense in our spirit. It doesn't bypass rational thought but neither is it held hostage to reason. It is willing to go beyond reason and act out of conviction.<br /><br />In a sense this is what happens by the end of the film. Rick appears to be self serving, finding a way out for him and Ilsa and abandoning Victor to his fate. But the man of conviction is restored once he knows that the love he and Ilsa shared was real. There was nothing fake about it.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">1.31.56 - 1.33.45 - Rick the Patriotic Hero</span><br />This final scene is one of the most famous in cinematic history. At every turn Rick surprises Louis, the Prefect of Police. The letters of transit are made out to Victor and Ilsa Laszlo. Rick is in effect signing his own death warrant for a greater good. The memory for Paris has now been transformed in his mind. It had value and still has value, <span style="font-style:italic;">"We'll always have Paris"</span> are some of his parting words to Ilsa.<br /><br />Love can change us. Rick claims he's not good at being noble, but that is exactly what he is doing at this point. Romantic love is wonderful. It lifts us off our feet. It is a strong drink - intoxicating. But there is a kind of love the Bible speaks about that goes beyond romantic love. This love has the well being and happiness of the beloved at heart. It is self-sacrificing. It is self-giving. That is what we see here. It's not your typical Hollywood ending. Ilsa leaves with her husband. It's the right thing to do.<br /><br />The change in Rick's attitude from isolation to renewed idealism and heroic engagement is often compared to the change in American policy and in public opinion after the attack on Pearl Harbor. Finally Rick is being authentic and makes decisions based on his convictions rather than fear, unbelief, expediency or disappointment. I hope this story inspires you to do the same. Self-giving love is the highest expression of love and always leaves us more whole as people.<br /><br />The final point of tension is to know what will happen to Rick at the end as Ilsa and Victor make their escape. I'll let you watch the rest of the movie to see how it turns out, but even at the end, there is another humorous twist.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-80883050474647750402011-05-02T09:55:00.000-07:002011-05-03T08:14:20.699-07:00The Kings Speech<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-g3oP7jjX-go/Tb_EDk0RDCI/AAAAAAAAAQs/teFrRwVJCpM/s1600/220px-Kings_speech_ver3.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 220px; height: 165px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-g3oP7jjX-go/Tb_EDk0RDCI/AAAAAAAAAQs/teFrRwVJCpM/s320/220px-Kings_speech_ver3.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5602412027173735458" /></a><br />The King's Speech is a British historical drama film directed by Tom Hooper and written by David Seidler. Colin Firth plays King George VI (Bertie), who, to overcome his stammer, sees Lionel Logue, an Australian speech therapist played by Geoffrey Rush. The two men slowly become friends as they work together. Bertie relies on Logue to help him with his public speaking engagements. <br /><br />After his brother Edward VIII abdicates he has to face the prospect of becoming King; something he is not trained or prepared for. The Film culminates in a radio broadcast the new King must make on the day that Britain goes to war with Germany at the beginning of World War II.<br /><br />Seidler began researching George VI's life after overcoming his own stammer during his youth. Using informed imagination he wrote about the two men's relationship. Nine weeks before filming, Logue's notebooks were discovered and quotations from them were incorporated into the script.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Clip One: 52.16 - 55.16<span style="font-style:italic;"></span></span><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">The Power of Learned Helplessness</span><br />The first scene I have selected is when Bertie begins to disclose to Logue his secret family history. These give us a clue to the underlying fears and insecurities that took root in his early childhood. The memory is so painful that at one point he can only disclose the nature of the punishment he received as a child by singing it instead of saying it, (people don't stammer when they sing!).<br /><br />George VI suffers from what Psychologists call 'learned helplessness'. The American psychologist Martin Seligman's did experiments at the University of Pennsylvania in 1967 and developed this theory. <br /><br />In one experiment Group One dogs were simply put in the harnesses for a period of time and later released. Groups Two and Three consisted of "yoked pairs." A dog in Group 2 would be intentionally subjected to pain by being given electric shocks, which the dog could end by pressing a lever. A Group 3 dog was wired in parallel with a Group 2 dog, receiving shocks of identical intensity and duration, but his lever didn't stop the electric shocks. To a dog in Group 3, it seemed that the shock ended at random, because it was his paired dog in Group 2 that was causing it to stop. For Group 3 dogs, the shock was apparently "inescapable." <br /><br />Group 1 and Group 2 dogs quickly recovered from the experience, but Group 3 dogs learned to be helpless, and exhibited symptoms similar to chronic clinical depression. Other experiments were performed with different animals with similar results. In all cases, the strongest predictor of a depressive response was lack of control over the aversive stimulus.<br /><br />Later they discovered that not all dogs suffered from earned helplessness. In fact about a third made a normal recovery. An individuals explanatory style was the key to understanding why people responded differently to adverse events. Although a group of people may experience the same or similar negative events, how each person privately interprets or explains the event will affect the likelihood of acquiring learned helplessness and subsequent depression.<br /><br />People with pessimistic explanatory style—which sees negative events as permanent ("it will never change"), personal ("it's my fault"), and pervasive ("I can't do anything correctly")—are most likely to suffer from learned helplessness and depression.<br /><br />This is what Logue finds himself up against in helping the King overcome his natural tendency to inferiority. Everything about his early childhood and history places him as unfit or inept for the task of being King. But Logue think differently. In this scene Bertie becomes more disclosing of his past and Logue, in his compassionate style, gives space for Bertie to express his pain.<br /><br />This is an important step in helping people reframe their past. They need to be free to express their pain in an environment where they are accepted and respected. Logue provides such an environment for the future King.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Clip Two: 1.02.29 - 1.04.30<span style="font-style:italic;"></span></span><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">The Power of Friendship</span><br />If the first scene shows us the power of learned helplessness this next scene shows us the power of friendship. Logue begins to challenge Bertie on his pessimistic interpretation of his own abilities and capacities. He does what the Bible says in Prov 27.6. He 'wounds' Bertie by speaking the truth. It leads to a confrontation where the King reviles and insults him.<br /><br />Challenging false thinking in others is never easy. They somehow find a perverse comfort in a lie they have lived with for a long time. It's what they have come to know and believe. But like Logue we have to have an interest in the well being of those we serve more than our own sense of fear about confrontation.<br /><br />Fear of the outcome of speaking the truth is what most often keeps us silent. We hate confrontation. But Jesus loved people enough to tell them the truth. What He said to the rich young ruler was hard, but had the potential to change his life if he really listened. To an ordinary fisherman like Peter He spoke of him being a rock on which He could build. We are often blind to our own potential. <br /><br />We need friends who can help us see our true calling and destiny. Paul was helped by Barnabas and Timothy was helped by Paul. Esther had an uncle called Mordecai who provoked her to see that she could do more to change history than she was prepared to give herself credit for. Joshua had a Moses; David had a Jonathan; Shadrach, Meshac and Abednego had a Daniel. All these people stepped into something they thought was bigger than them because someone else believed in them.<br /><br />Who are you helping? Who do you believe in? Moreover who believes in you? Who is challenging false thinking in you?<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Clip Three: 1.14.47 - 1.18.13<span style="font-style:italic;"></span></span><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">The Power of Forgiveness</span><br />In this scene we see the power of forgiveness. Forgiveness requires great humility. It requires humility to give forgiveness and humility to receive it. Sometimes we can take an offence when we hear the truth. This happened to Bertie. He hid behind loyalty to his brother and the crown. The truth was that he needed help. But Logue too demonstrates humility. He admits that in stating his case he went too far; something that is easy to do when you feel someone is resistant to your words.<br /><br />What is crucial to learn is that through forgiveness they found each other again. They were able to build again. And This is the power of forgiveness. When Jesus taught His disciples to pray, they learned; <span style="font-style:italic;">“Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors”, Matt 6.12.</span> When Jesus talked about forgiveness He invariably talked about owing money, (see Matt 18). It is a powerful illustration. To be forgiven is to have a debt cancelled. It is written off.<br /><br />This is how God treats us and it's how He wants us to treat each other. In Christ our debt to God is cancelled. He pays for our sin by His death on the cross. Now He extends forgiveness to us. The test of how deeply this has impacted us is in the way we now choose to relate to each other. Are we forgiving in our attitude? Do we hold a grudge? Are we so offended by what someone said that the truth of what they said is dismissed by us?<br /><br />I believe a persons spirituality is most truly revealed when they are called upon to forgive. Jesus taught His disciples to make it a part of their regular prayer life. They had to consciously and purposefully forgive. The more we are conscious of our own failings the easier it is to forgive others. Our own brokenness creates compassion in us towards others and makes us less judgemental. It is a divine quality.<br /><br /><span style="font-weight:bold;">Clip Four: 1.25.08 - 1.28.17<span style="font-style:italic;"></span></span><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">The Power of Finding Your Voice</span><br />Finally Bertie has come to terms with the inevitable - he would be King. The only choice that remained was for him to decide what kind of King he would be. Now in this clip we see another confrontation. The King has been told that Logue is not formally qualified. He has no acknowledged credentials. Pressure is put on him from his advisers to dismiss Logue, at the most crucial time in his process of finding freedom.<br /><br />Logue is articulate in his defence, reminding the King that he did not pretend to be anything other than what he was; a speech therapist. This final confrontation sees Logue mocking the King. It elicits a wonderful response where for the first time the King says, "I have a voice!" It is powerful and moving. And at that point Logue changes his tine and agrees with the King adding, "You are the bravest man I know".<br /><br />Sometimes we can never truly break through into our destiny until we find our voice; until we confess who we are; until we literally speak it out. Your voice is all about your call destiny. It's about your convictions. It's not about a borrowed faith but a faith that is real to you. You own it. You are the one who has been on the journey to know for yourself. <br /><br />Often in life we learn to live by the expectations of others. Others with powerful personalities can play on our insecurities so that they live out their dreams through us vicariously. Until we find our voice we will be pulled in all kinds of directions, never truly knowing who we are. But finding your voice enables to know what you can say yes to and what you can say no to. It establishes your authority and gains you respect.<br /><br />Jesus did not allow the religious or political leaders of His day to define Him. He had a voice. He did bend to the whims and wishes of the crowds but declared the truth as He heard it from His Father. And He was faithful to do this even when it cost Him His life. That's why His voice still has impact today. All those who follow Him find their voice too.<br /><br />Too often what we hear is not a voice but an echo. People are repeating the sound of others instead of finding their voice. We may begin our journey as an echo but we shouldn't stay that way. At some point we must find our voice; that which is truly authentic to us. And a good friend can help us in such a journey as they provoke us to speak what we truly feel instead of what we think people want to hear.<br /><br />My prayer is that this movie will help you break out of a victim mentality by allowing a friend to help you in your journey of faith. And that as you do, you will find your voice and step into your destiny. Once you have, then perhaps you will be that friend to others so that they can find their voice too.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-77588391779777792282011-04-28T06:45:00.000-07:002011-05-01T14:15:58.232-07:00A Better Resurrection<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-rOTKu_BPsHQ/TbmVKFxH1nI/AAAAAAAAAQk/vPGAoYN5C5I/s1600/better%2B1.jpeg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 126px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-rOTKu_BPsHQ/TbmVKFxH1nI/AAAAAAAAAQk/vPGAoYN5C5I/s320/better%2B1.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5600671612191364722" /></a><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Women received their dead raised to life again. Others were tortured, not accepting deliverance, that they might obtain a better resurrection, Hebrews 11.35</span><br /><br />This is perhaps a part of the famous chapter 11 passage in Hebrews that most people don't hear preached that often. We love the stories of faith where people triumph and breakthrough. But this speaks of some who chose death over compromising their faith. They did not accept deliverance because it was not offered on God's terms. Stephen, the first martyr in the church comes to mind. He died as a bold witness to Jesus and now looks forward to a better resurrection.<br /><br />In the context of the passage the writer is thinking of the accounts where those who had died were raised to life again. Five accounts spring to mind. Three in the Old testament and three in the New:<br /><br />1. 1Kings 17.7-24 Elijah raising the son of a widow<br />2. 2 Kings 4:18-37 Elisha raising the Shunammite widow's son<br />3. 2Kings 13.21 A dead man is buried in Elisha's grave and when he touches his bones comes back to life.<br />4. Luke 7.11-16 The raising of the widow at Nain's son by Jesus<br />5. Mark 5.21-43 Jesus raises Jairus' daughter from the dead<br />6. John 11 Jesus raises Lazarus from the dead<br /><br />In all these accounts the people who came back to life would die again! And this is the point of the writer in Hebrews. There is a better resurrection. It is described in more detail by Paul in 1 Corinthians 15. I'll say more about that later. Let's quickly review the book of Hebrews to see how significant this word 'better' is. It is used twelve times in this thirteen chapter letter.<br /><br />In the first two chapters Jesus is presented as better than the angels; Heb 1.4. The angels of God are commanded to worship Jesus, Heb 1.6 (something only reserved for God). In fact he goes on to say;<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">But unto the Son he saith, Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever: a sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of thy kingdom</span><br /><br />What could be more explicit. The Son is called God! This became important because many saw Jesus as as angel; a high ranking angel. But the writer leaves us with no doubt. Jesus is better. He did not take on the form of an angel but that of a man, Heb 2.16. He did as a man what He could not do as an angel - die for the sin of the world. Angels are servants to us. They are good, but Jesus is better.<br /><br />In chapter 3 we have the contrast between Jesus and Moses. Moses was a faithful servant of God who build God's house. But Jesus is the house that we are built into, Heb 3.4-5. He is better than Moses. Moses brings us the law, but Jesus brings grace and truth, John 1.17. As a servant Moses was good, but Jesus is better.<br /><br />In chapter 4 we read that Jesus is better than Joshua. (Joshua is the Hebrew name for Jesus). Joshua led the people of God into the promised land. The goal was to defeat all of their enemies so that they might have 'rest'. But Jesus is better than Joshua because He gives us a better rest. It is a rest that is rooted in the work of God; a rest we enter into by faith. We don't fight for this rest because Jesus has accomplished it for us. We enter in by faith. Joshua was good. Jesus is better!<br /><br />In chapters 5-7 Jesus is seen as better than Aaron, the High Priest. Aaron's priesthood passed down from father to son. It was limited to the tribe of Levi and males over 20. But the priesthood of Jesus is after the order of Melchizedek. Now he was an old Testament character who suddenly appears in Genesis when Abraham is returning form the battle of the kings. He blesses Abraham and receives tithes from him from the spoils of the battle.<br /><br />A number of significant points emerge. His name Melchizedek means 'King of Righteousness'. But he is also the King of Jerusalem. The word Jerusalem means 'Peace'. So this person is a King, the king of righteousness and the king of peace and a Priest of the Most High God. Not only that, there is no record of his birth or death. He just appears on the scene! And so he is a perfect type of Jesus; the one with no beginning and no end; who is also a King and a Priest. Aaron was good but Jesus is better.<br /><br />In chapters 8 - 10 we see that Jesus offers a better sacrifice than Aaron did. The priests of the OT offered the blood of bulls and goats. Each year on the day of atonement this ritual was repeated. The sacrifices could not permanently deal with sin or touch the conscience of the worshipper. But Jesus totally puts away sin by the sacrifice of Himself and presents His blood in the tabernacle in Heaven. There He lives able to make intercession for us and waiting for His enemies to be subdued. It's done forever. No more sacrifices. No more bad conscience. No more wondering if you are forgiven. It's a better covenant with better promises, Heb 8.6.<br /><br />In chapter 11 we see the importance of faith in the whole process. It is no longer about ceremony, rituals, the righteousness of the law or staying with the old. We have to move on. Now it is about entering into the new by faith; a principle that has always been there for those who had eyes to see it. Abraham looked for a city that had foundations, whose builder and maker was God, Heb 11.10. Jerusalem became the prototype of the Heavenly Jerusalem that will one day come down from heaven.<br /><br />In chapter 12 we have come to a better mountain. Sinai was where the law was given. But it was a fearful experience. There was thunder and lightening. A perimeter was set up so that no one could approach the mountain less they were killed. But Zion is the heavenly mountain where God has established the New covenant. It is surrounded with angels and the church and the saints who have gone before us.<br /><br />There the blood of Jesus speaks better things than the blood of Able. Both men where innocent victims killed before their time. The difference is that Able had his life taken, whereas Jesus gave his life willingly. Abel's blood cries out for justice. Jesus' blood cries out for mercy. It is better.<br /><br />In chapter 13 there is a better alter. The alter in Jerusalem was limited to the Levites. But the New Covenant gives us a spiritual alter of worship no longer limited to the Levites but open to all those who have faith in Jesus; no longer limited to Jerusalem but available in all places where people call on the name of the Lord from a pure heart.<br /><br />Everything about Jesus and what He has accomplished is better. So now we come back to this phrase - a better resurrection. In what way is it better? It is better qualitatively in four ways:<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">So also is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption:<br />It is sown in dishonour; it is raised in glory:<br />It is sown in weakness; it is raised in power:<br />It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body, 1Cor 15.42-44</span><br /><br />1. Our current bodies age and die. Every restoration to life in the Bible with the exception of Jesus meant those people would die again. But the resurrection of Jesus is different. He rose from the dead and holds the keys of death and Hades, Rev 1.18. Death no longer has power over Him and so it will have no power over us. Our new bodies will be incorruptible! No more sickness, no more death. Better!<br /><br />2. When we die decay sets in, immediately. Dead bodies hold no glory, no beauty, no honour. But the new resurrection body is totally glorious. Like Jesus at the transfiguration in Matthew 17 it will shine forth with the brightness of the sun. So we will literally reflect His glory with our bodies.<br /><br />3. As our natural bodies get older they get weaker; until one day we die. Even a top athlete must rest. There is a limit to what a strong man can carry. But the new resurrection body will be characterised by power. There is a new source of energy animating us. Not only that Jesus had the ability to appear in a locked room as in John 20.26; or to disappear right on front of people as in Luke 24.30.<br /><br />4. Finally the new resurrection body is 'spiritual' as opposed to 'natural'. A natural body is something we are all born with. We learn to relate to our world through this natural body. Only through the new birth do we learn there is a different way of living. It's called living by faith. Those who live this way learn that what we receive through our natural senses can fool us. They often don't take into account God's word or God's purpose. We have to learn to live being led by the Spirit. This is what makes us 'spiritual'. <br /><br />In the resurrection this will be easy. The spirit will govern freely. At present there is sometimes a battle that goes on in us to respond and obey the Spirit. The Bible calls this the war between the flesh and the spirit; Gal 5.16-18. This ends with the resurrection. The flesh that has been crucified will be finally put away and swallowed up in the new incorruptible, glorious, powerful, spiritual body of the future. It will be far better.<br /><br />So make choices in life now that reflect the certainty of this hope that is ours. I like the attitude of Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego. These young men were challenged to bow down and worship the statue of Nebuchadnezzar. Listen to their response to the King in this modern translation:<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">“O Nebuchadnezzar, we do not need to defend ourselves before you. If we are thrown into the blazing furnace, the God whom we serve is able to save us. He will rescue us from your power, Your Majesty. But even if he doesn’t, we want to make it clear to you, Your Majesty, that we will never serve your gods or worship the gold statue you have set up.” Daniel 3.16-18</span><br /><br />I like that. God can rescue us but even if He doesn't we will never serve your gods. That's gutsy. That's confidence. That's placing your hope in a better resurrection and not coming under the power of the fear of man. And look at how the story played out. As you read it think about your own life. Are you aiming for the better at any price or just settling for what works for now? Don't sacrifice the truth on the alter of your fear or convenience. Aim higher.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Nebuchadnezzar was so furious with Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego that his face became distorted with rage. He commanded that the furnace be heated seven times hotter than usual. Then he ordered some of the strongest men of his army to bind Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego and throw them into the blazing furnace. So they tied them up and threw them into the furnace, fully dressed in their pants, turbans, robes, and other garments. And because the king, in his anger, had demanded such a hot fire in the furnace, the flames killed the soldiers as they threw the three men in. So Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, securely tied, fell into the roaring flames.<br /><br />But suddenly, Nebuchadnezzar jumped up in amazement and exclaimed to his advisers, “Didn’t we tie up three men and throw them into the furnace?”<br /><br />“Yes, Your Majesty, we certainly did,” they replied.<br /><br />“Look!” Nebuchadnezzar shouted. “I see four men, unbound, walking around in the fire unharmed! And the fourth looks like a god[g]!”<br /><br />Then Nebuchadnezzar came as close as he could to the door of the flaming furnace and shouted: “Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, servants of the Most High God, come out! Come here!”<br /><br />So Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego stepped out of the fire. Then the high officers, officials, governors, and advisers crowded around them and saw that the fire had not touched them. Not a hair on their heads was singed, and their clothing was not scorched. They didn’t even smell of smoke!<br /><br />Then Nebuchadnezzar said, “Praise to the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego! He sent his angel to rescue his servants who trusted in him. They defied the king’s command and were willing to die rather than serve or worship any god except their own God. Therefore, I make this decree: If any people, whatever their race or nation or language, speak a word against the God of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, they will be torn limb from limb, and their houses will be turned into heaps of rubble. There is no other god who can rescue like this!”<br /><br />Then the king promoted Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego to even higher positions in the province of Babylon.<br /></span>Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-90288056737849409042011-03-29T13:19:00.003-07:002011-04-29T08:00:46.208-07:00The Big Invite<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-HZRfsW30qHk/TaPQji__EiI/AAAAAAAAAQM/jzarYDGLCpk/s1600/Invitation%2B1.jpeg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 259px; height: 194px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-HZRfsW30qHk/TaPQji__EiI/AAAAAAAAAQM/jzarYDGLCpk/s320/Invitation%2B1.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5594544471233466914" /></a><br />The Bible tells us many things about life, creation, God and ourselves. Throughout it's pages there are many times when God extends an invitation to us. Now receiving an invitation is always special. It often communicates that we are valued. After all, you tend to invite your favourite friends to special events where you will spend time, energy and money on them. <br /><br />God is no different. He places a special value on people, which is why He continually extends invitations to us. The only difference is that God is no respecter of persons. In other words He extends the invitation of knowing Him to all - including those who don't deserve it!<br /><br />In Matt 22(NIV) we read:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">1 Jesus spoke to them again in parables, saying: 2 “The kingdom of heaven is like a king who prepared a wedding banquet for his son. 3 He sent his servants to those who had been invited to the banquet to tell them to come, but they refused to come.<br /> 4 “Then he sent some more servants and said, ‘Tell those who have been invited that I have prepared my dinner: My oxen and fattened cattle have been butchered, and everything is ready. Come to the wedding banquet.’</span><br /><br />The Bible tells us that history will conclude with a wedding. The marriage of the Lamb (Jesus) and the Bride (the church). This parable tells us that God wants all to come to this wedding. All are invited. But like any invitation it's possible to say no. It's possible to place a higher value on something else instead. And so with every invitation there has to be a response that says 'Yes' if the invite is to have any real meaning. Without a response it simply remains an invitation and no more.<br /><br />Scripture places great emphasis on our response. It is often a reflection of our heart attitude. When Jesus invited the disciples to follow Him their response was often dramatic. <span style="font-style:italic;">At once they left their nets and followed him; Matt 4.20. And immediately they left the boat and their father and followed him, Matt 4.22</span> Notice the careful choice of words used:<span style="font-style:italic;"> "At once.... Immediately....".<span style="font-weight:bold;"></span></span> There was no delay in their response. It was almost like a reflex. The invitation connected with something that was alive in them and they said <span style="font-weight:bold;">'Yes'.<span style="font-style:italic;"></span></span><br /><br />I want to explore five invitations in the Bible that God extends to us. This is not meant to be an exhaustive list; simply suggestive of the number of different ways that God reaches out to people. Further it shows how much He respects the final choices that we make. The invitation to enter the Kingdom is real and genuine and open to all. However, Jesus makes it clear that this is only possible when some things take place first. So here is the first invitation He throws out to people:<br /><br />1. <span style="font-style:italic;">But go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy and not sacrifice.’ For I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners, to repentance, Matt 9.13.</span> This is Jesus at His most forthright. The word repentance has become quite loaded over the years. We often associate it with turning from sin and turning to God; feeling bad about things we have done wrong in the past; changing our lifestyle. But the word is made up of two Greek words; meta - to change and noia - mind or thinking. So to repent means to change your thinking; to change your mind.<br /><br />Jesus calls sinners and invites them to think differently, about life, about sin, about forgiveness, about the future and even about themselves. He is in fact inviting all of us to see things differently. A change in life cannot happen without a change in thinking. This is where it all begins. <br /><br />Those who came to Jesus often got more than what they bargained for. Many came to get physically healed and found that they needed a deeper healing - a healing of the heart; a transformation from within. The man born blind discovered this in John 9. Having been healed by Jesus of his blindness he found himself excluded from the Synagogue. John 9.35-38 says;<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Jesus heard that they had cast him out; and when He had found him, He said to him, “Do you believe in the Son of God?”<br />He answered and said, “Who is He, Lord, that I may believe in Him?” <br />And Jesus said to him, “You have both seen Him and it is He who is talking with you.” <br />Then he said, “Lord, I believe!” And he worshiped Him.</span><br /><br />This man's faith was a demonstration that he had a change of thinking; for repentance and faith are two sides of the same coin. To do one necessitates doing the other. Faith requires repentance and repentance leads on to faith. Real discipleship always begins with a radical change of thinking. In fact true discipleship requires a lifestyle of allowing your thinking to change. It's called having a renewed mind, Rom 12.2, Eph 4.23.<br /><br />2. The second invitation I find helpful is in Isaiah 1.18<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">“ Come now, and let us reason together,” <br /> Says the LORD, <br /><br /> “ Though your sins are like scarlet, <br /> They shall be as white as snow; <br /> Though they are red like crimson, <br /> They shall be as wool.</span><br /><br />It's an invitation to dialogue with a promise thrown in. The problem with many conversations today is that they start from a place of hostility. This is what makes conversation and peace talks so difficult in places like the Middle East. Each party is already disposed to believe the worst about their counterparts. They begin from a place of suspicion. God wants us to know that His basic disposition is for us. He is able to transform the worst of us - no matter what we have done. He is looking to achieve reconciliation and delay judgement as long as possible.<br /><br />Talking with someone when you believe they are for you and have your best interest at heart is totally different from trying to talk to someone who is antagonistic towards you. And the outcomes are different too. When we speak with God in this way He opens His heart to us and invites us to open our hearts to Him. He is not afraid of the hard questions; He has answers. Sometimes those answers humble us and we realise we know less than we thought. Like Job we may find ourselves saying:<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;"> 4 “ Behold, I am vile;<br /> What shall I answer You? <br /> I lay my hand over my mouth.<br /><br /> 5 Once I have spoken, but I will not answer;<br /> Yes, twice, but I will proceed no further.” Job 40</span><br /><br />Later in Job 42 we read:<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;"> 1 Then Job answered the LORD and said:<br /> 2 “I know that You can do everything,<br /> And that no purpose of Yours can be withheld from You.<br /><br /> 3 You asked, ‘Who is this who hides counsel without knowledge?’<br /> Therefore I have uttered what I did not understand, <br /> Things too wonderful for me, which I did not know.<br /><br /> 4 Listen, please, and let me speak;<br /> You said, ‘I will question you, and you shall answer Me.’<br /><br /> 5 “I have heard of You by the hearing of the ear,<br /> But now my eye sees You.<br /><br /> 6 Therefore I abhor myself,<br /> And repent in dust and ashes.</span>”<br /><br />Notice that his exchange with God also led to a change of thinking - he repented! His questions about his suffering seemed less important after his dialogue with God. It brought him into a new understanding of his own limitations both in knowledge and experience.<br /><br />Christianity does not require us to park our brains into neutral so that we can embrace faith. Rather it challenges us to engage our entire being in knowing God. That means it is an intelligent faith and there are intelligent answers for the hard questions in life. Alpha is a program that embraces the notion of asking hard questions and allowing people the opportunity of entering a process where they can think through for themselves the relevance of the claims of Jesus. And to date the results are impressive. According to statistics compiled by the Christian Research Organisation, more than 1.3 million people in the UK have already completed the Alpha Course. <br /><br />Many people have heard of Richard Dawkins book "The God Delusion". Less have heard of Alister McGraph's book "The Dawkins Delusion?" McGraph holds both a DPhil (in molecular biophysics) and a Doctor of Divinity degree from Oxford. His book is a gracious response to Dawkins many errors, both of history and theology. Dawkins ability to speak with an assumed authority on theological matters belies his ignorance and incompetence when he strays into these fields. As a scientist he is brilliant. As a theologian and historian he is inept. <br /><br />He has refused to engage in debate with William Lane Craig, who is probably one of the best Christian apologists alive today. His evasion of such an encounter makes me wonder if there isn't a more sinister agenda motivating his vitriolic stance against Christianity. Antony Flew, one of the world's leading philosophers, has changed his mind about God. In his words:<span style="font-style:italic;"> "I have become a deist like Thomas Jefferson." </span>He cites his affinity with Einstein who believed in <span style="font-style:italic;">"an Intelligence that produced the integrative complexity of creation." </span>This does not make him a Christian, but it shows what can happen to man who is willing to engage in genuine dialogue.<br /><br />Listen to the openness with which he speaks; <span style="font-style:italic;">"Since the beginning of my philosophical life I have followed the policy of Plato's Socrates: We must follow the argument wherever it leads." When asked if it was tough to change his mind. "No. It was not hard. I've always engaged in inquiry. If I am shown to have been wrong, well, okay, so I was wrong."</span> It is this kind of honest debate that God invites us to engage in. Through it we can come to new places of understanding and belief.<br /><br />3. Jesus said in Mat 11.28-30:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">"Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.”</span><br /><br />This is a wonderful invitation to partnership. One where we can find peace and rest. A relationship that is easy and not demanding. One that won't burn us out. The metaphor is of course of the Oxen that were yoked together in pairs. Usually an older Ox was hooked up to a younger one. The older Ox had a better understanding of the pace with which to work and expend energy. So the younger Ox could not simply rush ahead. The yoke prevented it. The yoke was a simple crossbeam that went across the neck of each of the oxen. It allowed them to keep pace together. In the same way Jesus invites us to come to Him and do life differently; to do it with Him, where He takes the lead and we learn to go at His pace.<br /><br />I love this invitation. It speaks to most people who experience life today. Life can be heavy; it can be tiresome. People feel harassed. They want a break. But Jesus offers more than a break. He offers a new way of living; a new way of doing life; a partnership that fulfils us, rather than exploit and use us. He discloses to those who don't know Him, <span style="font-style:italic;">"I am gentle and lowly in heart".</span> Jesus doesn't come as top dog; He comes to serve. He comes to teach us, not from a position of superiority, but from the humble position of a servant.<br /><br />Like all the other invitations this one too requires a response. There must be a willingness to be yoked. In one sense we have to overcome the fear that we may be abused or exploited and trust in who Jesus has revealed Himself to be. Such a partnership will bring rest to our soul - something we all desperately need. I also find that this must be expressed tangibly through genuine accountable relationships. Timothy was yoked to Paul who in turn had spent time yoked to Barnabas. John Mark was yoked to Peter and Barnabas.<br /><br />Our submission to Jesus will always be validated by a human relationship that requires our submission. Just as our love for God is worked out in our relationships, so is our submission. One is in fact the test of how genuine the other is. John says we cannot say we love God whom we have not seen if we cannot love our brother whom we have seen, 1Jon 4.20. And this works with being yoked in partnership.<br /><br />4. God also invites us to celebrate! The story of the Prodigal Son in Luke 15 ends with the Father giving full and free forgiveness to his wayward son and then throwing a party. The celebration is not about the achievements of the son. Rather it is about the generosity and forgiving heart of the Father. Something that was dear to him was lost and now is found. It was dead and now is alive and this is cause for celebration.<br /><br />In the story the whole house is invited to this party, but the older brother excludes himself. He is indignant, disgusted with his brother's choice of lifestyle and offended by his father's generosity and forgiving spirit. And so the father pleads with him to see things from a different point of view, (to repent and have a change of thinking). Then the story ends. Did he have a change of heart and go in to the celebration or did he remain obdurate and continue to exclude himself? We don't know. And that's the point.<br /><br />I believe the church needs to demonstrate Heaven's joy over those whose lives are touched and changed by Jesus. Celebration should characterise our meetings. Praise and thanksgiving should be the norm among God's people. We are here for the praise of the glory of His grace, Eph 1. Yet to look at many Christians today you could be forgiven for thinking they had been baptised in vinegar. There is no real joy; no sense of celebration about their life or the transforming power of Jesus in others.<br /><br />Like the older brother in Jesus parable they are often holding an offence against others and even God Himself. They think they are justified in their stance, not seeing that a self righteous attitude has griped their hearts. It's sad. It's tragic. It's not right. When forgiveness characterises relationships in a church then celebration and joy are a natural outcome. Ephesians 5.18-20 shows us that those who are filled with the Spirit have a continual song in their hearts. Celebration is something they carry with them.<br /><br />This is why Paul exhorts the church to<span style="font-style:italic;"> "Rejoice in the Lord always, again I will say rejoice", Phil 4.4</span>. He knows that only those who have entered into God's joy are able to do this. It is why I believe that praise has to be an important part of the way we worship when we come together as God's people. Praise is all about the greatness of God, who He is and what He has done. Celebrating His presence sets the tone for how we will respond to His word.<br /><br />5. Finally, Jesus invites us to enter into the inheritance He has prepared for us, Matt 25.34-36:<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Then the King will say to those on His right hand, ‘Come, you blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world: for I was hungry and you gave Me food; I was thirsty and you gave Me drink; I was a stranger and you took Me in; I was naked and you clothed Me; I was sick and you visited Me; I was in prison and you came to Me.'</span> <br /><br />The Kingdom we inherit is both 'now' and 'not yet'. In the future we will inherit the fullness of the Kingdom; new resurrection bodies like that of Jesus. Bodies free from sickness, fatigue and any form of decay. The Bible calls them 'glorious bodies'. With them we inherit the new heaven and the new earth. A place fitting for the King to reign in. Until then we have the promise of the Kingdom through the down payment of the Holy Spirit. And in Him we can experience something of the future now. <br /><br />Rom 14.17 tells us that the righteousness, peace and joy of the Kingdom is in the Holy Spirit. He makes it all real; now. The invitation to finally inherit the Kingdom is not unconditional. Only those who have extended care and mercy to others will receive this invitation. It is reserved for the 'sheep'; those who belong to the King. They have trusted in Him and an inward transformation has taken place. They now care about the things that concern the King.<br /><br />Every act of obedience now is storing up for us a future inheritance; reserved in heaven where moth and rust cannot corrupt and thieves cannot break in and steal. This should encourage us. We can experience the reality of the Kingdom now in our hearts and relationships and also look forward to a fuller expression of the same Kingdom at the return of Jesus.<br /><br />My prayer for us is that we will say yes to every invitation extended to us by the king. Our response allows us to enjoy and experience something more than we have to date. It takes us further into God and further into the blessing of being a son of God.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-80169935052021063522011-03-29T13:19:00.001-07:002011-04-26T10:28:04.078-07:00A Vision for People<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-MI63r-E-MCc/TbWlBX3E7YI/AAAAAAAAAQU/6QyHshIL4EM/s1600/People%2B1.jpeg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 242px; height: 208px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-MI63r-E-MCc/TbWlBX3E7YI/AAAAAAAAAQU/6QyHshIL4EM/s320/People%2B1.jpeg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5599563154708557186" /></a><br />How do we get people to move from being interested in Jesus and coming to church to being actively involved? What are the steps that will help them on such a journey? And what is our responsibility in that process?<br /><br />John the Baptist was the forerunner to Jesus. He prepared the way. He prepared hearts to encounter Jesus. In John's gospel we see how he did this. When Jesus walked by he spoke to his disciples, <span style="font-style:italic;">"Behold the Lamb of God! ", John 1.35.</span> John's preaching had consistently told people that someone greater was coming, <span style="font-style:italic;">After me will come one more powerful than I, the thongs of whose sandals I am not worthy to stoop down and untie, Mark 1.7 NIV</span>; one who would baptize with the Spirit and fire, Matt 3.11. So John's disciples knew that Jesus was significant. They trusted John. They believed his preaching. They had followed him. Now he was pointing them to someone greater, the fulfiller of all the promises he had spoken about.<br /><br />You see John was putting his weight behind Jesus and these disciples trusted his word. He had sufficient trust and integrity with these men for them to take what he said seriously. Now that is an important lesson for us in the church. We can find ourselves in life situations where people get to know us. They learn to trust us. Our opinion matters to them. So when we point people to Jesus we can in fact pique their interest. Notice too how subtle John was; <span style="font-style:italic;">"Behold the Lamb of God".</span> Within Jesus culture this is highly suggestive, but not explicit.<br /><br />So these two men begin to follow Jesus - from a distance; until He finally turns around and asks what they seek, John 1.38. They are the original stalkers of the NT! Imagine being followed by two men who when you ask them what they want ask you where are you staying!! That's what happened here. And Jesus said,<span style="font-style:italic;"> "Come and see!"</span> He meets their interest with an invitation; an invitation to explore and discover for themselves. Now they begin to take initiative. Later in the same chapter Andrew goes to fetch his bother Peter. Philip seeks out Nathaniel. Like John they now put their weight behind Jesus. And like Jesus they extend the same invitation; <span style="font-style:italic;">"Come and see"</span>.<br /><br />This interest is then translated into the first phase that I believe is crucial to people becoming involved; illumination. Illumination is like an aha moment. It's when light breaks in and you see something clearly for the first time. You now have understanding. You get it. This happened to Peter in Matt 16. Everyone had an opinion about Jesus but Peter received a revelation from Heaven. He got it. Flesh and blood didn't tell him. It came from above. Light broke in and he saw who Jesus really was; more than a carpenter; more than a prophet; more than a Rabbi. He was and is the Messiah, the Son of the living God.<br /><br />2Cor 4.3-4 NIV tells us about three realities.<br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">And even if our gospel is veiled, it is veiled to those who are perishing. The god of this age has blinded the minds of unbelievers, so that they cannot see the light of the gospel that displays the glory of Christ, who is the image of God. For what we preach is not ourselves, but Jesus Christ as Lord, and ourselves as your servants for Jesus’ sake. For God, who said, “Let light shine out of darkness,” made his light shine in our hearts to give us the light of the knowledge of God’s glory displayed in the face of Christ.</span> <br /><br />These three realities are; a devil who blinds minds, preventing people from being saved; a God who commands light to shine into hearts, saving and transforming them and finally God's servants who bring the saving message of Jesus. Notice how Paul links the saving power of God with the account of creation. The first thing God commanded was for light to shine. This is crucial. People may express interest in the gospel but until light breaks into their spirit they are still in darkness. Like Peter in Matt 16 they need an aha moment.<br /><br />In Luke 24 we have the story of two of the disciples on the Emmaus road. These men are believers but they are selective believers. As Jesus drew near to them the text tells us that their eyes were blocked from seeing Him for who He truly was. They knew Him but didn't recognise Him. I call them selective believers because later Jesus says in Luke 24.45; <span style="font-style:italic;">"O fools, and slow of heart to believe <span style="font-weight:bold;">all</span> that the prophets have spoken"</span> They believed, but selectively. They didn't believe in all that was spoken by the prophets. And so they missed Jesus, even when He was right in front of them.<br /><br />I see this problem in the church today; selective faith. We believe certain parts of scripture and hold other parts at a distance. There are many reasons for this. Sometimes we are lazy. We plateau in our faith being content with knowing what we know and not bothered by what we don't know. But this is dangerous. True discipleship is about constantly growing and learning. When we think we have arrived we can get careless and pride can set in. We are setting ourselves up for a fall. What areas of your life do you have 'selective faith'?<br /><br />In John's gospel Nathaniel came to check out Jesus because of Philip. He didn't have a high expectation;<span style="font-style:italic;"> "Can anything good come out of Nazareth? John 1.46."</span> Nathaniel was incredulous. But then he met Jesus who had insight into Nathaniel; <span style="font-style:italic;">"Behold an Israelite indeed in whom there is no guile"</span>. This was a high commendation. But Nathaniel was not easily moved or given to flattery. He is still suspicious of Jesus. <span style="font-style:italic;">"How do you know me?"</span> is his retort, John 1.48. So Jesus takes it one step further. He demonstrates prophetic insight showing Nathaniel that He knew what he was doing earlier that day; <span style="font-style:italic;">"Before Philip called you, when you were under the fig tree I saw you".</span><br /><br />This is like an aha moment for Nathaniel. Light breaks in. He goes from unbelief to faith in a second; <span style="font-style:italic;">"You are the Son of God, You are the King of Israel"</span>. Jesus response is telling. <span style="font-style:italic;">"I tell you the truth, you shall see heaven open, and the angels of God ascending and descending on the Son of Man</span>". It's almost like He is saying, <span style="font-style:italic;">"If that impresses you, you haven't seen anything yet".</span> Each one of the disciples had to come to the place of seeing Jesus for who he truly is. This is a God event. We preach, but He commands light to shine. So when we preach we must also pray that God will break through the darkness and bring about a new creation event. "Let there be light, in the face of Jesus".<br /><br />The next phase that is crucial is to get people initiated. We seem to have lost our sense of how important this is with every community. Under Jewish law male babies were presented for circumcision eight days after their birth. This incorporated them into the covenant of Israel. Then at thirteen they came to Jerusalem for their Bar mitzvah. Through it he was seen to have the same rights as a full grown man. A boy who had become a Bar Mitzvah was now morally and ethically responsible for his decisions and actions. The term "bar mitzvah" also refers to the religious ceremony that accompanies a boy becoming a Bar Mitzvah. Today a celebratory party would follow the ceremony and that party is also called a bar mitzvah.<br /><br />These events were important in the life of the community and helped Israel maintain its sense of identity. This is one of the reasons that gangs function so well. Despite the violence and crime they often engender there is a deep sense of belonging in them. You can't just join a gang, you must be initiated into it. There is a task you must perform to show you are serious, that you can be trusted, that the gang will be something you will give your life for. And often there is a symbol you must accept, a tattoo, a dress code or even a way of speaking that includes a special vocabulary.<br /><br />This is why Jesus required people to be baptised in water as a symbol of their union with Him. It was public, open for all to see and hear. It required genuine faith and courage because in those early days Christianity was seen as a fringe sect of Judaism. It also reminded people that to be joined to Jesus meant to be joined to His church, the community of people who followed Him. This initiation through water into the community was also a symbol of our baptism in the Holy Spirit. So the early apostles prayed that people would be filled with the Spirit. They actually laid hands on disciples and prayed for this experience. In every case it happened as close to their initial faith experience as possible.<br /><br />This initiation marked a transition. They went from being outsiders to insiders, non members to members. Their faith in Jesus was expressed by embracing this initiation ceremony that identified them permanently with His people - the church. Not only that; when believers came from other churches and joined a new local church they would extend to them 'the right hand of fellowship'. It was a public display that they were now part of this particular local congregation. They had a new language too. It was the language of faith. All things were now possible through Christ and that was their confession.<br /><br />When they sent out missionaries they laid hands on them with fasting and prayer. It was an event! They did the same thing when appointing new leaders. My point is that transitions were marked with a ceremony of some description that initiated them into a new phase of life. We need to maintain and recapture this in the church today. I remember my Baptism, my graduation from Bible College, my ordination. All of these events carried special meaning to me because they were attended by a ceremony of some description. And they were all public! Most of them were simple affairs, but they were memorable and became landmarks in my journey with God. What initiation steps have you taken? What ones remain for you to take? What is holding you back?<br /><br />People who have been illuminated and initiated now need to be included. Including people is the best way of involving people. And the church should be great at this for it is fundamental to who we are as the people of God. It's interesting to see who Jesus included. He not very PC (Politically Correct) in His choices. Take his disciples; they are all mainly from the region of Galilee, four of them are fishermen. He chooses two sets of brothers and is not embarrassed to have Simon the Zealot on His team. The Zealots were patriotic fanatics who wanted freedom from Roman oppression and would use violence to achieve their aims. Today we call them terrorists! And then along side him is Matthew the tax collector. He collected taxes on behalf of the Romans who were the occupying force. Since 1940 the term used for such people is collaborator. In this context it is a pejorative term. Yet Jesus includes all the men, together!<br /><br />Not only that, Jesus allowed people like Mary to <span style="font-style:italic;">'sit at His feet'</span>, Luke 10.39. This is a technical term used by Luke to describe those who were the disciples to their teachers. Mary is referred to this way in Luke 10 and so is Paul who was educated at the feet of Gamaliel in Acts 22.3. The inclusion of women by Jesus is radical given the culture and tradition that surrounded Him. But Jesus isn't trying to act democratically or maintain traditions that do not further God's purpose. He is responding to something that He sees in each of these people and so He welcomes them and includes them. That is great leadership.<br /><br />But to include people also means we exclude others. We need to be careful here that we do not become 'exclusive'. Jesus included Peter, James and John in the transfiguration event and in doing so excluded the other nine disciples. But this wasn't a clique. It was Jesus taking these few men to another level for that event. From there He comes down the mountain and ministered to others. He is never exclusive. So there may be times when we focus on a select few for a season; but let's make sure it doesn't become a permanent feature of our ministry.<br /><br />Rom 15.7 NIV is instructive. It says; <span style="font-style:italic;">Accept one another, then, just as Christ accepted you, in order to bring praise to God.</span> The thinking of the past used to be that to be part of a church you had to believe in order to belong. Now we know that when we belong, we learn to believe. Relationship comes first. It is the transforming power of being yoked to a true disciple that changes us. By making room for others we create an environment of acceptance where people feel included. In such an environment they can develop and sharpen their gifting; they can learn to reach higher levels of faith and grow in confidence. <br /><br />I often include inexperienced leaders in meetings so that they get the chance to see and hear how I do leadership. I don't expect them to make any significant contribution, (though I have been pleasantly surprised at times). I want them to understand and catch the atmosphere we operate in first. I include them! To delay including people in decision making processes is simply to delay their training. And you can be sure they will be learning how to do it from somewhere. Better for it to be from you - the leader.<br /><br />People who feel included commit. They get their hands dirty. They get involved. They often go above and beyond what you expect of them. Involvement can be measured in three main dimensions: time, effort and money. Some people give more of their time. Others have less of this to give, but make a huge effort to see things happen. They use connections and networks to serve Kingdom purposes. Others show their involvement by releasing significant sums of money to the Kingdom. A few are able to do a combination of these and some have the ability to be involved in all three dimensions.<br /><br />Think through where you are in your journey with Jesus. Do you need to go to a knew level of faith? Do you need to open your heart to more revelation? Is there another step of obedience you should be initiated into? Baptism? Filled with the Spirit? Tithing? Connect Groups? Do you include others into your world so that they can include you in theirs? How involved are you? Could you give more time, effort or money to what God is doing in your church? <br /><br />Once you have some answers to these questions dare to take steps that show this is not just a paper exercise. Share your plan with a friend who can hold you accountable to implement these changes. As you do you will be modelling to others what it means to walk with Jesus in the details of life. And they will be provoked in a good way to follow your example. Your obedience will be their inspiration.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-64427579806707261762011-01-17T22:58:00.000-08:002011-03-09T02:51:47.859-08:00The Four Faces of the Church<a href="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-eMacdq_E0P4/TXdV7D9eqnI/AAAAAAAAAQE/tQaxQ9PjWYs/s1600/Four%2Bfaces%2B1.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 49px; height: 80px;" src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-eMacdq_E0P4/TXdV7D9eqnI/AAAAAAAAAQE/tQaxQ9PjWYs/s320/Four%2Bfaces%2B1.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5582024736312830578" /></a><br />In Rev chapter 4 we are introduced to a vision of heaven, a vision of the throne, a vision of Jesus. Around the throne of God stand four living creatures. They offer up worship to God 'day and night'. They declare truth about the nature of God, "Holy, Holy, Holy". In other words, God is altogether special, set apart from everything else and unique. Each of these creatures has a face like that of a lion, an ox, a man and a flying eagle. Four faces.<br /><br />It is interesting how the number four is significant in the Bible. It is the number most connected with creation and the earth. We talk of the four points of the compass, the four corners of the earth, the elements, earth, air, fire, and water; the divisions of the day, morning, noon, evening, and midnight. Not only that there is a special relationship between the number three, representing the trinity, and one. The Bible begins with, "In the beginning God created....." Thus creation follows on from who God is as Trinity; Father, Son and Holy Spirit.<br /><br />This three-one relationship making four is also found in Proverbs 30.15-16; 18-19;21-23; 29-31 NIV<br /><br />There are three things that are never satisfied, <br />four that never say, ‘Enough!’: <br />the grave, the barren womb, <br />land, which is never satisfied with water, <br />and fire, which never says, ‘Enough!’ <br /><br />There are three things that are too amazing for me, <br />four that I do not understand: <br />the way of an eagle in the sky, <br />the way of a snake on a rock, <br />the way of a ship on the high seas, <br />and the way of a man with a young woman.<br /><br />Under three things the earth trembles, <br />under four it cannot bear up: <br />a servant who becomes king, <br />a godless fool who gets plenty to eat, <br />a contemptible woman who gets married, <br />and a servant who displaces her mistress. <br /><br />There are three things that are stately in their stride, <br />four that move with stately bearing: <br />a lion, mighty among beasts, <br />who retreats before nothing; <br />a strutting rooster, a he-goat, <br />and a king secure against revolt.<br /><br />Proverbs 30.24-28 NIV also highlights four things in creation we can learn from:<br /><br />Four things on earth are small, <br />yet they are extremely wise: <br />Ants are creatures of little strength, <br />yet they store up their food in the summer; <br />hyraxes are creatures of little power, <br />yet they make their home in the crags; <br />locusts have no king, <br />yet they advance together in ranks; <br />a lizard can be caught with the hand, <br />yet it is found in kings’ palaces. <br /><br />So the number four is uniquely associated with creation and the God of creation. The living creatures surround God's throne and inspire Heaven's worship. Each face is representative of the four faces of the church. This in turn is a reflection of the four faces of Jesus that we see in the gospels. Matthew is the Lion where Jesus is presented as the King of the Jews. The Lion is the King of the beasts and is the most noble of the wild animals. Jesus is the Lion if the tribe if Judah. Matthew's genealogy shows He descends from David as the rightful King of the Jews. More scriptures are quoted in Matthew than any other prophecy to show that Jesus is the fulfilment of all that the prophets foresaw.<br /><br />Kings have authority. Authority to rule and reign. But Jesus is not just any King. He is like Melchizedek - King of Righteousness. This is what the name means. So like Jesus we have authority but it is an authority to rule in righteousness. Psalm 89.14 tells us the <em>"Righteousness and justice are the foundation of Your throne".</em> If the church is to reflect this aspect of the face of Jesus then we must learn to rule the way He did, with righteousness and justice. Thus Kingdom authority is used to protect the weak and vulnerable not to take advantage of the naive and ignorant.<br /><br />In Rev 19.11 we see a vision of Jesus riding out of Heaven. We are told, <em>"In righteousness He judges and makes war".</em> He fights unrighteousness. He wars against injustice - wherever it is found. This is why Jesus told us to seek the Kingdom first and His righteousness, Matt 6.33. Righteousness characterises the Kingdom. It means being in right relationship with God in order that we may do right, in life, in relationships, in politics, in business in law, in everything. And when it isn't right we take on the face of a lion. We roar and fight until it comes right.<br /><br /><em>Prov 28.1 says, "The wicked flee when no one pursues but the righteous are bold as a lion".</em> Lions are characterised by their lack of fear. The wicked on the other hand are slaves to paranoia. They flee when no one pursues. This face is important because the enemy is described as, <em>'a roaring lion seeking whom he may devour', 1Pet 5.8.</em> He is the ultimate counterfeit using the roar of intimidation to silence the church. But not all lions are the same. There was a big difference between Scar and Mufasa in the Disney production of 'The Lion King'. And that's the difference between Jesus and satan. Let's make sure we are building a church that fights on behalf of the weak and oppressed and doesn't intimidate or exploit them.<br /><br />Mark has no genealogy for here Jesus is presented as the Servant of the Lord and no-one is interested in where a servant comes from, only what they do. So we see the face of an Ox in this presentation of Jesus. It's also why this gospel is the shortest. It gets straight to the point. The key word in this book is 'immediately'. Mark uses it no less than eight times in the first chapter. For example, he says the <em>"Spirit immediately drove him out into the wilderness"; (Mark 1:12). "And immediately he called them", (Mk 1:20); "Immediately on the sabbath he entered the synagogue and taught"; (Mk 1:21); "And immediately the leprosy left him"; (Mk 1:42).</em><br /><br />Thus Mark is an action book. Like the Ox, who was both the most valued and productive of all the domesticated animals, Jesus is presented to us as the one who gets on with the job! With this face I can say "I serve in the strength of the Lord" <em>Prov 14.4 says; "Where no oxen are, the crib is clean: but much increase is by the strength of the ox".</em> <br /><br />A crib is a barred storage box where corn and other grain products are kept for feeding cattle and other farm animals. From this usage we have adapted the word to mean the barred small bed for children, which has a similar appearance. A cattle crib is similar to the manger in which Jesus was placed after birth; (Luke 2:7). <br /><br />If a farmer plows, cultivates, and harvests by hand, he only has the strength and endurance to work a very small section of ground. His family may barely survive. The storage crib for corn or other produce will be clean - empty, because he and his family will have eaten all he could plant and harvest.<br /><br />But if a farmer can buy an ox, he will have invested in something that can give him greater production. This animal can easily weigh one ton and has enormous strength for pulling. It can pull a plow through the soil for many hours a day, 1Kings 19:19 <br />cultivating many acres. The ox can trample the raw corn and separate it from the stalk, Deut 25:4, and it can drive a grinding wheel much better than could Samson, Judges 16:21. It can even pull heavily loaded wagons to market, Num 7:3. <br /><br />The farmer with an ox now produces much more than he needs to eat and consequently increases his wealth. But increased productivity often means increased mess! And mess sometimes makes us take our eyes off the very thing that is making the mess; the productive ox. What part of your life right now is being blessed and fruitful? What is helping you be productive? Now what kind of mess is also being produced as a result of that? What are you more focused on? The productivity or the mess?<br /><br />The eagle is a bird that can fly higher than any other. And it does so effortlessly. This is because it relies on the rising thermals that can carry it to great heights. With wing spans of almost 3 metres to help it do this the eagle gains the best perspective on what is going on. It sees from above. It is therefore about having Heaven's perspective on life. The Greek word for wind (and breath) is <em>pneuma</em> which can also be translated <em>spirit</em>. So the eagle is a picture of the church soaring in the Spirit in order to get God's perspective on anything.<br /><br />The gospel that helps us see this best is John's. It begins, not with a birth but with God; Jesus face to face with the Father. It predates creation for creation flows out of the activity of the Godhead. In this gospel we find people misunderstanding Jesus over and over again. John often gives us retrospective interpretations as to what Jesus meant, John 2.17-22; 4.31-33; 6.55-63; 7.37-39; 8.56-58; 14.7-11. Jesus words are Spirit and life. Without the Spirit we cannot truly understand what is going on.<br /><br />Jesus reminds Nicodemus he must be born from above, John 3.3. All true ministry comes from above, John 3.27. And John reminds us that Jesus is from above, John 3.31. The disciples looked on the harvest fields in John 4.35 but Jesus saw it differently; <em>'Do not say, "There are still four months and then comes the harvest"? Behold I say to you lift up your eyes and look at the fields, for they are already white for harvest'.</em> Notice how he says 'Behold', 'Lift up your eyes, 'look'. This is about seeing with heaven's eyes. Seeing from a different perspective - God's perspective.<br /><br />So with the face of the eagle we soar in the Spirit. The church needs this. Without revelation we are limited to a natural perspective and if that is all we have we will miss what God is up to. He has Kairos moments, opportunities that must be spiritually discerned. As Jesus wept over Jerusalem He saw the coming destruction on the City. It was the inevitable result of their hardness of heart, <em>"Because you did not know the time of your visitation", Luke 19.44. </em>He reflected on the fact that the things that would bring peace, <em>"Are now hidden from your eyes", Luke 19.42.</em><br /><br />With the face of the flying eagle we keep the prophetic vision of the church sharp. We can discern what God is up to and respond in faith. This is why worship is so important. It lifts our spirits. As we lift up the name of the Lord He lifts us up. We begin to see what Heaven sees. We move in revelation by, beholding, seeing and looking. These were all the words Jesus spoke to His disciples in John 4.<br /><br />Finally there is the face of the man. Man is of course the pinnacle of God's creation, for we are made in His image. The Bible tells us the story of how that image was lost and how it is being restored - through Jesus. <em>"For it is the God who commanded light to shine out of darkness, who has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ", 2Cor 4.6</em> Notice that God's glory is seen in the face of Jesus - the face of a man.<br /><br />Paul tells us that at present we see through a dim mirror, but one day we will see <em>"face to face", 1Cor 13.12.</em> This is powerful. When God spoke with Moses it was different to every other prophet. It was 'face to face'. There was a level of intimacy and trust in that relationship that set it apart and it is God who made the distinction, Number 11.1-8. This aspect of Jesus is best reflected in the Gospel of Luke. Here we see Jesus the man, dependant on God. So in Luke there is a strong focus on the prayer life of Jesus more than any other writer. We have only one account of Jesus growing up as a boy and He is about His Father's business.<br /><br />In Luke His genealogy is not just traced to David. It goes all the way back to Adam, for He is the Saviour of the world. In Luke Jesus reaches out to everyone, Jews, Samaritans, Gentiles, women, the poor, the sick. All are embraced, accepted and loved. In this gospel you are left with the clear sense, 'I belong'. But Luke's gospel has a part two that shows how the life of Jesus was lived out after His ascension. This is Acts. So it's not just that 'I belong' but that 'I belong in community'.<br /><br />To be baptised into Jesus is to be baptised into His body, 1Cor 12.12-14. To be added to Jesus is to be added to His church, <em>Acts 5,14 "And believers were increasingly added to the Lord..."; Acts 2.47 "And the Lord added to the church daily those who were being saved".</em> You can't have one without the other. A relationship with God is worked out in the context of relationship with His people. This is where we grow, share our gifting, find mutual accountability, are built up and strengthened in our faith.<br /><br />These four faces of the church reflect the four faces of Jesus. We need them all. To focus only on one is loose something of Jesus. He is all things to all men. And the church is called to go into all the world to make Him known. We will find ourselves more naturally attracted to one or two of the face more than the others. But the truth is that we need them all. The task of leadership is to know what season the church is in so that world sees the right face and gets a clearer revelation of Jesus. For He stands in Heaven at the centre of it all. And the church is on earth to give Him his rightful place here too.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-77795763813273146632011-01-13T12:43:00.000-08:002011-01-15T10:56:43.683-08:00Heaven's Open Door<a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_g_XaX7t87rE/TTHnYtQT3fI/AAAAAAAAAP4/J-wI0EedG9A/s1600/lionlamb.30215914.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 303px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_g_XaX7t87rE/TTHnYtQT3fI/AAAAAAAAAP4/J-wI0EedG9A/s320/lionlamb.30215914.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5562481426430156274" /></a><br />Revelation chapters 4 & 5 give us a glimpse of a different reality than what we are used to day-to-day. Chapter four begins with a door open in Heaven and an invitation to John; <em>"Come up here and I will show you.....".</em> The book begins with John having a revelation of Jesus in chapter one. The next two chapters contain letters spoken by the ascended Lord Jesus to be sent to the seven churches of Asia Minor; seven real historical churches that John gave oversight to. <br /><br />But there is more to <em>'show'</em> John; more for him to <em>'see'</em>. And in order for him to see clearly he needs a better perspective, a higher perspective, a heavenly perspective. So a door is opened in heaven with an invitation to enter. Heaven's open door is in fact a door into heaven's reality. To see things from heaven's view. This is the only way to truly understand life. Life must be lived with both feet on the ground but it is understood by setting our affections on things above, Col 3.2. The issue is not, 'What do I think?', or 'What do you think?'. Rather it is, 'What does God think?'.'What is heaven's view?' <br /><br />Without a heavenly perspective on all that goes on in the world we may be left discouraged, discontented and disconnected from what God is doing. God doesn't want this. He wants us to know what He is about and to partner with Him in bringing about His purposes, <em>"On earth as it is in heaven", Matt 6.10</em>. The book of Revelation is meant to encourage the church to be overcomers - just like Jesus. Specific promises are given to those who overcome. And now in chapter 4 of this amazing book, John is invited into the very presence of God.<br /><br />The scene that confronts him is overwhelming. For those who struggle with loud music in church I wonder how you would get on if you shared John's experience? The voice he heard was, <em>'Like a trumpet speaking', Rev 4.1. 'From the throne proceeded lightnings, thunderings and voices', Rev 4.5.</em> There is 24 hour proclamation, Rev 4.8. A strong angel speaks with a <em>'loud voice', Rev 5.2</em>. They sing new songs, Rev 5.9-10. John hears over 100 million angels speak <em>'with a loud voice'</em>, Rev 5.11-12. The whole experience is a visual and auditory extravaganza.<br /><br />Now this door is in heaven. It is open and he is invited in. Before John has time to think about how is he going to do this he is, <em>'Immediately....in the Spirit', Rev 4.2. </em>With the invitation comes the empowerment to experience what lies before him. I like that. With every invitation that Jesus gives, comes the empowerment to act on what we are invited to do. <em>"He who calls you is faithful, who also will do it", 1Thess 1.3. "For it is God who works in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure", Phil 2.12.</em> Without any effort on John's part he is there, in the Spirit; in heaven; in the presence of God. Immediately!<br /><br />For now I want to focus on three things that impressed John as he enters this scene. The first thing is the throne of God and the one sitting on the throne. In other words the first thing that strikes him is God's Kingly authority. For all thrones carry that meaning. Despite what is happening on earth God is in charge. He is the creator. His throne is above all things and at the centre of all things. And He is on His throne. No power has succeeded in dethroning Him. God's authority stands.<br /><br />Not only that, the promise given to the church was for us to share the throne with Jesus, just as the Father had allowed Jesus to share His throne; <em>Rev 3.21, "To him who overcomes I will grant to sit with Me on My throne as I also overcame and sat down with My Father on His throne".</em> Thus the throne is not just picturing God's authority it is also representative of our destiny, if we overcome. Right at the beginning of this experience two things are placed together. Divine authority and human destiny.<br /><br />Later John sees the 24 elders, <em>'Each having a harp, and golden bowls full of incense, which are the prayers of the saints', Rev 5.8.</em> The harp is a musical instrument that was a part of Israel's history and often used by David in worship, Psalm 33.2; 43.4; 49.4; 149.3; 150.3; 1Sam 16.23. The golden bowl full of incense is reminiscent of the alter of incense that stood before the veil where the Priest entered the Holy of Holies. We are left in no doubt as to the meaning of these bowels of incense. They are <em>'The prayers of the saints'.</em><br /><br />This is amazing. In this heavenly scene we begin to see the connection between heaven and earth, between God and man, between authority and destiny; between purpose and prayer. Something we do here has impact there! Much Calvinistic teaching here wants to persuade us that it's all in God's hands, exclusively. He controls everything. Our choices don't make any real difference ultimately. They are anticipated and planed for. The Biblical view is more subtle. It is more nuanced. <br /><br />The book of Revelation shows us that the end of history is certain. Christ will be the ruler over all things. <em>"The kingdom's of this world have become the Kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ and he shall reign for ever and ever", Rev 11.15.</em> This is indisputable, unalterable, unimpeachable. God's overall strategy is secure. Yet within that strategy God has left room for tactical changes. Human choices that can change the future to some degree without changing God's overall objective. <br /><br />Think of Jesus when He predicted the destruction of Jerusalem in Matt 24. He said to pray for two things in particular, <em>"Pray that your flight may not be in winter or on the Sabbath", Matt 24.20. </em>Destruction is coming but the prayers of the saints can determine the month and the day! A tactical impact, not a strategic one. They were not allowed to pray that the destruction wouldn't happen. That would be to work against the plan and purpose of God. But they could pray that the flight was not in winter, (when it is cold and difficult to survive without adequate shelter) and not on the Sabbath, (when everything closes and transport and movement is almost impossible).<br /><br />And so in heaven we see the elders before the throne. Harp in one hand and sweet smelling bowls of incense in the other - the prayers of the saints. I love the thought that God experiences our prayers as incense. They are a delight to Him. They move Him to act. David asked the Lord if the men of Keilah would betray him onto the hands of King Saul, 1Sam 23.12. The Lord was clear in His answer, <em>'They will deliver you'</em>. So David acted promptly and escaped. Prayer and revelation helped him change the future. His own. From our perspective he changed history. And God let him. <br /><br />The second thing that John noticed was the Focus of Heaven. Everything came out from a centre. On the outside were millions of angels. As we move in we see 24 thrones and the elders worshipping. These elders are universally recognised as representing the saints; for they sing, <em>"You have redeemed us to God by your blood out of every tribe and tongue and people and nation", Rev 5.9.</em> Only people like you and me can sing that song. They are also clothed in white robes. Rev 7.13-14 give us further insight. They are those who have, <em>"Washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb",</em> (see also Rev 3.4-5).Further they have crowns, another thing promised to the overcoming saints, Rev 2.10;3.11.<br /><br />But why 24? Let me offer a couple of reasons. The worship that goes on in heaven is 'day and night', twenty four hours. David arranged for 24 divisions of priests to offer praise to God continuously, 1 Chronicles 24:7-18. Also in Paul's writings he shows that in Christ God had torn down the wall of division between Jew and gentile and created one new man, who both have access to God the Father through Christ, Eph 2.11-18. <br /><br />The way of identifying Israel in the Bible was through the twelve tribes. It is the names of these tribes that appear on the City gates of the New Jerusalem, Rev 21.12. But the church is founded on the twelve 'apostles of the Lamb' and their names appear on the foundations of the New Jerusalem, Rev 21.14. Thus together we have 24; Jew and Gentile together as one. This is the fulfilment of Jesus' promise in <em>John 10.16, "And other sheep I have which are not of this fold; them also I must bring and they will hear My voice; and there will be one flock and one shepherd".</em><br /><br />Moving in from this circle we now come to the 4 living creatures. The first thing John notices is that they are <em>'full of eyes in front and in back', Rev 4.6; 'around and within', Rev 4.8.</em> They see. They Look. They watch. They do not rest, day or night. They are vigilant. They seem to co-ordinate the worship of heaven to give, <em>"Glory, honour and thanks to Him who sits on the throne", Rev 4.9.</em> Thus they direct all the praise to God. (They seem to be the same creatures seen by Ezekiel in his vision while in Babylon, Ezek 1.4-14).<br /><br />Now at the centre we are back to the throne. The Father sits with a scroll in His hand. A question is asked, <em>"Who is worthy to open the scroll and to loose its seals?" Rev 3.2</em> Notice how John is caught up in the moment. Our theology tells us he could have answered this question. But it seems that he is caught up with the utter sense of futility that no one could be found either, <em>"in heaven or on earth or under the earth", Rev 5.3.</em><br /><br />This scroll appears to contain God's purpose for the reign of humanity on the earth. This mandate was given to Adam but handed over to satan through sin. No one was found worthy to take it back until Jesus. And so we finally come to the focus of heaven. <em>"And I looked and behold in the midst of the throne......stood a lamb as though it had been slain......Then He came and took the scroll out of the right hand of Him who sat on the throne", Rev 5.6-7.</em> All these angels. All these saints, The four living creatures. But at the heart of it all, Jesus - the Lion of the Tribe of Judah, the Root of David. The one who is worthy.<br /><br />No wonder Paul was so Christ centered in everything he did. He understood heaven's focus. He could confidently declare to the church at Colossi that in all things Jesus must have the preeminence, Col 1.18. If Jesus is the ultimate focus of heaven then we must live life in a way that makes Him our ultimate focus too. Yes there is family. Yes there is work. Yes there is ministry; but at the heart of all this must be Jesus. He must be at the centre and not on the periphery. Notice too that heaven worships Jesus; <em>"You are worthy to take the scroll and to open its seals....", Rev 5.9</em><br /><br />Only God is worthy of worship. Yet here the Father hands over the scroll to His Son, who has prevailed; who has lived life in a way that has pleased the Father; who embraced the cross to redeem humanity and restore human destiny. Fully man. Fully God. Worshipped by heaven. And loved by you and me. John tells us in one of his letters; <em>"We love Him because He first loved us", 1John 4.19.</em> It is this 'first love' that Jesus implores the church at Ephesus to return to, Rev 2.4. For what we love captures our hearts and becomes the object of our worship.<br /><br />Finally, John begins to understand the language of heaven. How we speak says a lot about us. The words we choose, the way we phrase things, our tone. All these things make up language. Even in silence we cannot not communicate. John learned that heaven's language is centred on the Holiness of God, the worthiness of God, the power of God, the plan of God and the purpose of God. It led to humble, heartfelt appreciative worship.<br /><br />I'm sure we can learn something here. Have you noticed how the apostolic writers encourage to live life with praise and thanksgiving at the heart of all we do so that God gets the glory, Eph 1.12; Phil 1.11; Heb 2.12;13.15; 1Pet1.7; Col 3.22; 1Cor 10.31; 2Cor 4.15. The language of heaven is filled with praise, thanksgiving and appreciation. Not only that, it has the right evaluation of people. The saints in heaven have been made worthy, they have been clothed in robes of righteousness, they wear crowns.<br /><br />How do you see your brothers and sisters in Christ? Can you view them this way? We need to ask the Father to give us heavens view of one another. So often when we speak to each other we do so on the basis of our history together; our successes and our failures. But heavens language goes beyond this. Jesus knew that Peter would betray Him. At the time that Peter was confidently boasting of his willingness to die for Jesus; Jesus knew differently. But what did He do? He prayed! He didn't react. He didn't get disappointed. He didn't drop him from the apostolic team. He didn't choose another leader. He prayed. He heard from heaven. <br /><br />And as He prayed He got heavens perspective and spoke heavens language over Peter's life. He knew the strategy of the enemy was to sift and destroy Peter, <em>"Satan has asked for you that he may sift you as wheat", Luke 22.31.</em> So Jesus prayed, not that he wouldn't fail, but that his faith wouldn't fail. Not only that, He spoke to Peter's destiny. <em>"And when you have returned to Me, strengthen your brethren".</em> How amazing. Peter will betray Jesus three times and here is Jesus using the language of heaven. It is the language of hope, the language of faith; language that speaks to Peter's destiny, more than his failure.<br /><br />I believe we need to get heaven's perspective on the lives and ministries of those we know. When we do, we should speak heaven's language to them. The language of praise, appreciation, purpose and hope. This can help people walk through difficult times. Failure does not have to be what defines us. Through encouraging words, through heavens language, we can build them up and help instill hope into their hearts. I pray that as a church we get a glimpse of the Throne of God. In doing so we will begin to see the focus of heaven and, in time, we will learn to speak the language of heaven.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-75733810693012341012011-01-13T07:15:00.000-08:002011-01-13T12:03:29.996-08:00The Door of Hope<a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_g_XaX7t87rE/TS9UDRpkrkI/AAAAAAAAAPw/jyx8-fOjdi4/s1600/Door%2Bof%2BHope.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 120px; height: 90px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_g_XaX7t87rE/TS9UDRpkrkI/AAAAAAAAAPw/jyx8-fOjdi4/s320/Door%2Bof%2BHope.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5561756480079965762" /></a><br /><em>Therefore I am now going to allure her; <br />I will lead her into the wilderness <br />and speak tenderly to her. <br />There I will give her back her vineyards, <br />and will make the Valley of Achor a door of hope. <br />There she will respond as in the days of her youth, <br />as in the day she came up out of Egypt. <br /><br />In that day, declares the LORD, <br />you will call me 'my husband'; <br />you will no longer call me 'my master'.<br />Hosea 2.14-16 NIV</em><br /><br />Hope is an amazing thing. Hope deals with our deepest longings. The things we desire to see happen. It is entirely focused on our future as we can imagine it. God Himself is described in the Bible as 'The God of Hope'; Rom 15.13. He is the source of true hope and the giver of hope. His plans and future for us are better than anything we can forge out for ourselves. <br /><br />Listen to the way God speaks through the prophet Jeremiah to a group of captured Israeli slaves in Babylon. People who now feel rejected, abandoned by God and ashamed of their sin that has allowed this to happen to them. They are now dispossessed and the only ones to blame are themselves;<br /><br /><em>For I know the thoughts I have towards you says the Lord, thoughts of peace and not of evil to give you a future and a hope; Jeremiah 29.11.</em><br /><br />Despite the discipline that they had been through as a nation God's basic disposition of heart was to do them good. Sin and its negative effects often make us doubt this. We become suspicious of God's motives. But most of the time we are simply reaping the consequences of what we have sown. God's heart, His intention towards us, is good. He wants us to experience life to the full, John 10.10.<br /><br />In this Jeremiah passage He leaves the captives in no doubt. All is not lost. There is a future for them and their progeny. God still has a plan that human sin has not thwarted. He is bigger than our sin! And His plans include giving us a new destiny. This is the hope that He wants to instill in our hearts.<br /><br />The passage in Hosea picks up on this theme. Hosea's marriage to Gomer was one of personal tragedy. It mirrored the relationship God had with the nation of Israel. For, like Israel, Hosea's wife went off with other men. He was heartbroken. And God used this man's personal tragedy to speak to the nation; not with the language of strong rebuke and argument, as with other prophets, but with the language of emotion, the language of the heart. In Hosea we see God's pain because His love for Israel is rejected through her adultery with other gods.<br /><br />The Hosea passage begins with God's strategy. He will 'allure' her into the wilderness. This is definitely the language of romance. The wilderness was where they met. It's where they fell in love. It's where they were married through covenant. God wants to take them back to that place. It's a but like taking your spouse back to where you met, where your heart was captured by who they were. God wants them to remember something - their love for each other.<br /><br />We know this because He declares, <em>"There she will respond as in the days of her youth, as in the day she came up out of Egypt".</em> God expects that her attitude will change once He gets her alone. Once she is back in that place where they first met. He expects something to stir in her heart that reminds her of the value of what they had together.<br /><br />Not only that, God is expecting a different outcome to when they were first married. The problem was that Israel had viewed God the way many other nations had viewed their gods. They were masters to be obeyed. Many marriages in Biblical times were like this. But the text implies that this is not what God was after. He wants to be known as a husband and not a master. This is amazing, radical, ground breaking truth. God is actually looking for a partner not a servant! This is why the New Testament language for the relationship between the church and Jesus is that of Bride and Bridegroom, Eph 5.31-32; Rev 21.2.<br /><br />He wants to empower His wife, not give her orders. Her lack of understanding His heart on this issue led to her looking for fulfillment elsewhere. How tragic! How mistaken they were. If only they had understood how much God wanted to be with them and bless them and empower them. Jesus turned to His disciples one day and said; <em>"No longer do I call you servants..... but I have called you friends",John 15.15.</em> It's a different level of connection; a different level of intimacy; a different level of expectation from the relationship.<br /><br />Notice how He will do this. He will <em>'allure'</em> her. The word can be translated as <em>'entice'</em> or even <em>'seduce'</em>, (the same Hebrew word is clearly used this way in Ex22.16). Given the context I believe this is God's intention. There is nothing wrong with seducing your own wife! That's is God's plan! It's almost like God is saying, "I'm going to take her on a second honeymoon and seduce her".<br /><br />But the text goes further. He goes on to say He will <em>'speak tenderly to her'</em>. The word <em>'tenderly'</em> means I will speak to her <em>'heart'</em>. God is not using the rational language of argument here; He is using the language of emotion. He wants to connect, heart to heart. And in that place He promises to restore to his wife her vineyards. Vineyards had great significance in Israel. They were a sign of blessing. They provided grapes for new wine and were a symbol of Israel's connectedness to God; Is 5.1-7.<br /><br />To help Israel understand the impact of this metaphor God chooses an event in Israel's history that left the nation with a deep scar. It centered around the sin of Achan when Israel entered the land and defeated Jericho. This man took gold, silver and a garment. All the spoils from this particular battle belonged to God. They were like a first fruits offering to the Lord; dedicated to Him. Every other battle after that Israel was allowed to keep the spoils.<br /><br />Achan showed a lack of faith in God by deceitfully hiding this stuff in his tent. It led to the defeat of the nation in a battle at Ai; a much smaller city. Achan's sin effected the whole nation. It brought shame and defeat upon them. Achan was eventually found out and he and his entire family were killed and all his possessions burned with fire at the Valley of Achor. This tragedy left Israel with a deep sense of shame. To speak about Achor was like reminding the nation of the place of failure, defeat, shame and embarrassment.<br /><br />Now God reminds them of this place, but says He will place there a 'Door of Hope'. In the place of their disappointment He will give a door of hope. This is amazing. It shows the power of love. God is not going to change the past He is going to change the way they see the past. He is going to give them a new expectation. In the place of disappointment they will find hope - for He is the God of Hope!<br /><br />This is how redemption works. It gives hope to the hopeless. It says that the mistakes of the past do not have to be what define us in the future. There is forgiveness with God. There is the possibility that we can start again; that it can be even better than it was. To call God 'my husband' instead of 'my master' shows a new way of relating has been formed. This is what God is promising to His beloved wife. It will be better than ever!<br /><br />I take great encouragement from this. Think of the seasons in your life you would rather not talk about. They were shameful, disappointing times. You feel embarrassed to speak of them. People run away to new towns and build new lives in order to avoid their failures and disappointments. But this strategy of avoidance always leaves us looking over our shoulder. What if we are recognised? What if someone turns up who knows? It's no way to live.<br /><br />God takes our disappointments and failures and uses them to create a door of hope. How can that be? Let me tell you about a friend of mine who was a drug dealer. He was notorious and well know to the police in the area he came from. Eventually he ended up in prison and there he met Jesus. He had nowhere to run. He was as it were, a captive audience! In that prison he grew spiritually. He began to see the negative impact his life had had on so many people. In his sorrow and repentance He found forgiveness and hope.<br /><br />Today this man is a pastor and I count it a privilege to call him a friend. He has shared his story with many drug addicts and pushers and lots of them have found faith and healing in Jesus. And some of the stories are remarkable. Long term, hardened, criminal drug dealers, have found forgiveness and new life in Jesus. Tragedy has turned into triumph. Sorrow has turned into joy. Insecurity has turned into confidence. Disappointment has turned into hope. All of this because his testimony created a door of hope and others have walked through it.<br /><br />Rom 15.4 says: <em>Now may the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, that you may abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit.</em><br /><br />We are meant to 'abound in hope by the power of the Holy Spirit'. I like that. Two things strike me. The first is that when it comes to hope there is meant to be a surfeit, an abundance. The word abound means to have a large measure or to overflow. This is how God wants us to be in our lives. Overflowing with hope. Full of expectation. Enough for ourselves and for those around us who have no hope. Enough to give away to others.<br /><br />The second thing is that we don't have to produce this ourselves. It's not about working something up in our emotions; getting psyched up to be positive about the future; reading a Dale Carnegie book on the power of positive thinking. This is released in our lives through the power of the Holy Spirit. Wow. God releases hope into our lives through His abiding presence. The Holy Spirit usually does this by taking the promises of God and awakening our hearts to their reality for us.<br /><br />We come to see that God has not just forgiven so and so He has also forgiven us. So and so's testimony may have been used by God to create a door of Hope but once we pass through that door we can claim that we too are changed; we too are forgiven. Through the Holy Spirit we too have Hope. And this hope changes everything. It changes the way we see life; the way we see other people; the way we even see ourselves.<br /><br />Two qualities mark out this kind of Hope according to Rom 15.13. The first is joy. Disappointment often leads to sorrow and sadness. But hope leads to joy. Hope can make you happy! Think of Hannah in 1Sam 1. After she had poured out her heart to the Lord she went away to her home. The Bible says; <em>"So the woman went her way and ate and her face was no longer sad", 1Sam 1.18.</em> <br /><br />She did not yet receive the answer to her prayer but she had hope and it made her joyful. It literally changed her face! Our face is often a reflection of how we truly feel. We may learn the art of hiding our feelings but eventually how we feel leaks out. Emotional reactions are like a reflex and our face betrays our true state of mind. Hannah's face changed because hope now filled her heart. <br /><br />The second quality of this kind of hope is peace. Disappointment is often marked by feelings of guilt or bitterness over lost opportunities. It can make us angry and contentious. Peace however is not just the absence of these emotions, it is positive feeling of well being. A sense of order in our inner world.<br /><br />To know that God is for us and not against us; to know that He has plans for us despite our failings; to know that He is working together for our good all bring a deep sense of peace. We don't have to strive to make things happen in life. We can rest in the plan of God that He will bring about His purposes as we wait expectantly on Him. In fact the Old Testament term <em>'wait on the Lord'</em> meant to wait with expectation that He will act. It wasn't a passive resignation to the ways things were. It was a positive expectation that things would change and get better.<br /><br />The last thing to remember about Biblical hope is that it requires patience on our part. Hope is about the future. It's about something that will happen. Joy and peace keep our hearts buoyant while we patiently wait for God's 'hour' to come. It what the Bible calls a 'Kairos' moment. A moment that has come about because all things are now in order for God's purpose to break through. Galatians puts it like this: <em>"But when the fullness of time had come, God sent forth His son", Gal 4.4.</em> <br /><br />God waited until the time was right. Others like Simeon were, <em>"Waiting for the Consolation of Israel", Luke 2.25.</em> He too had this sense of timing, living in expectant hope that God would act before he would see death, Luke 2.26. This becomes a way for us to see if our hope is birthed in God or just wishful thinking. If it's birthed in God then we can expect to have joy and peace. Our face should reflect our inner life. Any patience we show will be a product of that peace and not peppered with frustration like when we are waiting for a late bus.<br /><br />God's promises are there to help birth hope in us. <em>"For whatever things were written before were written for our learning, that we through the patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope", Rom 15.4.</em> The stories and promises of scripture comfort us. We can rest in His timing. We can trust His purpose. We can find hope where there has been disappointment. And as we do we can bring this to others.<br /><br />Live this week in the power of the Holy Spirit who will help you abound in hope. Let joy and peace fill your heart as you do. watch and see what God can accomplish through you as you adopt this inner posture. It's like a door. It stands open waiting for you to pass through. Take this step into your future and see it through the eyes of hope. And as you do, your testimony creats a door of hope for others too. In this simple way we can touch the lives of many people.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-67551485607220155472010-12-27T07:58:00.000-08:002011-01-12T08:05:24.030-08:00The Door of Opportunity<a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_g_XaX7t87rE/TSxkBF88oOI/AAAAAAAAAPo/vVSC860YMVY/s1600/doors%2B1.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 108px; height: 134px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_g_XaX7t87rE/TSxkBF88oOI/AAAAAAAAAPo/vVSC860YMVY/s320/doors%2B1.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5560929609836175586" /></a><br />Rev 3.2 says that Jesus has the key of David; the authority to open and close doors. He then goes on to tell the church at Philedelphia that He has set before them an open door. Paul uses similar language when he speaks to the Corinthian church; <em>1Cor 16.9 For a great and effective door has been opened to me and there are many adversaries.</em><br /><br />I call this the door of opportunity. They rely on a number of unique things coming together. The first is timing. Most opportunities are time sensitive. They are not there forever. At some point a decision must be made. To procrastinate can often mean the opportunity is lost and we are left with a horrible feeling of regret. To quote Shakespeare; <br /><br /><em>There is a tide in the affairs of men.<br />Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;<br />Omitted, all the voyage of their life<br />Is bound in shallows and in miseries.<br />On such a full sea are we now afloat,<br />And we must take the current when it serves,<br />Or lose our ventures.<br />(Julius Caesar Act 4, scene 3)</em><br /><br />It's a powerful metaphor. Ships can only sail with a high tide. To miss the tide is to miss the opportunity. Fortunately for ships tides return. There is another opportunity, albeit on another day. But life doesn't always present us with another chance. Jesus wept over Jerusalem because they had missed the hour of their visitation. The door of opportunity was closing on them. They had missed their time to recieve the Saviour, Luke 19.41-44. (A final opportunity will come at the end of the age, but they must wait for it and be provoked to jelousy by a triumphant church that lives in the fulness of the blessing that naturally belongs to the children of Abraham, Rom 11.11,25-27).<br /><br />This leads on to another issue. Opportunities need to be discerned. The nation of Israel did not take the opportunity because they did not see it. They were blind to it. Most doors of opportunity need to be spiritually discerned. Simon Cowell is reportedly one of the most famous people alive today. He is known for many achievements; The X Factor; Britain's got Talent; American Idol; as well as being a successful television and record producer. But he is also known as the man who refused to sign up 'The Spice Girls'. A Missed opportunity in a field he is normally good at.<br /><br />Think of Jesus in John 4. Scripture records that He <em>'needed to go through Samaria' John 4.4. </em>This route was not the normal road taken by Jews travelling to the Holy City. The antipathy between Jews and Samaritans meant that most Jews avoided this road. Instead they took a longer more circuitous route to avoid any contact with a Samaritan. But Jesus breaks with tradition and taboo and takes the shorter more direct route. This led to His encounter with the Samaritan woman at the well. An encounter that led to the salvation of an entire village. An encounter that shocked His disciples and changed the destiny of a community, John 4.39-42.<br /><br />Notice how Jesus challenges the thinking of His disciples; <em>"Do you not say 'There are still four months and then comes the harvest?', Behold I say to you, lift up your eyes and look at the fields, for they are already white for harvest", John 4.35. </em>He is inviting them to 'see' more clearly; to discern what God is up to and to walk through the door of opportunity.<br /><br />Doors of opportunity also require some risk taking on our part. Think of Jonathan and his armour bearer in 1Sam 14. They were outnumbered by the enemy Philistines; two against an entire garrison. But Jonathan saw a door of opportunity. He knew that the issue was not about numbers. <em>"For nothing restrains the Lord from saving by many or by few", 1Sam 14.6. </em>The real issue was discerning God's favour to breakthrough and defeat the enemy. He asked the Lord for a simple encouragement by the way the Philistines would respond to his challenge. He got the answer he was looking for and these two men defeated their enemies.<br /><br />It is a great credit to Jonathan's armour bearer that he followed him in this venture. Jonathan saw the opportunity and his armou bearer trusted his judgement. At the end of the day that is what leadership is all about; people trusting your judgement. That's why you need to get it right consistently. It builds trust. It builds confidence. It establishes your leadership track record. Everyone can forgive a few missed calls but they must be few. Then people will willingly follow. We lead out of discernment, not position.<br /><br />Doors of opportunity sometimes come dressed as a Goliath; big, intimidating, loud and mocking. But faith allows us to go beyond this to see and experience victory. Another feature about doors of opportunity is that they are usually seen and pursued by those who have a pioneer spirit; people who like to push the boundaries; who are not content to live with the status quo but long to see change and advancement. Jonathan was such a man and his armour bearer recognised this and followed him.<br /><br />I believe that every day the Lord has doors of opportunity for His church to walk through. Doors that need faith on our part. Doors that can only be seen by the discerning eye. Doors that require us to strike while the iron is hot. Doors that pioneers point out to us and we do well to follow their lead. But Paul also said that with this door of opportunity there were also many adversaries. In the Western world the church may not yet experience the persecution that was a regular part of Paul's ministry but there are other adversaries, no less intimidating to pioneers.<br /><br />The first adversary is the power of unbelief. It is generated through negative confession. Remember Joshua and Caleb who were the only two spy's that brought their confession into line with God's promise to take the land. The other spies brought an 'bad report', Num 13.32 and it discouraged the heart of the people. Unbelief spread like a virus and the whole nation was affected. It robbed the whole nation of the opportunity to posses the land for forty years, Num 13.26-14.10,22-24.<br /><br />Be careful what you say and what you hear. Words are powerful. They either build or destroy faith and faith is essential if we are to dare to risk going through a door of opportunity. Our western world view has developed a strong scepticism towards the miraculous. We've even written it into some of our theologies. It's called cessationism. It claims that spiritual gifts and miraculous healings should not be expected by the ordinary Christian today. It was there to establish the early church and then passed away with the death of the first apostles.<br /><br />But God's word is true for all generations. He doesn't change. With the outpouring of the Spirit is the ongoing promise of His gifts and power. It is, after all, described in the book of Hebrews as a 'better' covenant. How can healing and the miraculous be part of the old and part of the early church, but not part of our inheritance today? This view doesn't come from an honest reading of the Bible. It is a theological imposition rooted in rationalism. A world view that has dominated Western thinking for four hundred years.<br /><br />Postmodernism has created a new opportunity for the church. People are open to new beliefs in a way they weren't thirty years ago. Science and rationalism have not brought the promised benefits and peace people claimed they would. Instead we have suffered two world wars and been left in a spiritual vacuum. What a great opportunity to proclaim the truth; not through argument but meaningful involvement, servant hood, caring and praying.<br /><br />Currently we have over 250 mothers registered in our soft play program that operates out of our ministry centre called 'The Hub'. Over 100 customers a day use our coffee shop. Our manager is effectively a pastor to the unchurched who come through our doors every day. And now some of them come on Sunday too. It's a door of opportunity. We saw it. We invested in it. Now we are making a difference - little by little. Our door of opportunity has become their door of opportunity. Through it many are finding faith and forgiveness in Jesus.<br /><br />The other great adversary we face is fear. One of the enemy's greatest tactics to stop us moving forward into the opportunities God is giving us is intimidation. This is what Goliath tried to do with David. His size, his experience his intimidating language put fear into the armies of Israel. Only David rose above this and proclaimed his faith in God to gain victory over the enemy. What the armies saw as a frightening foe David saw as an opportunity for glory. And he was right!<br /><br />Fear paralyses us. It gets our minds focused on the wrong things. What if....? We imagine scenarios that may never happen but in our minds they become certainties. And that is where the battle must be fought first; in our thinking. Fear always works by getting us to forget about God and His promises. Whenever Jesus turned up on the scene with His disciples His mode of entry was never conventional. Walking on water; appearing in locked rooms; these events all shocked them and so His first words were either; <em>'Peace to you'; Luke 24.36</em> or <em>'Don't be afraid'; Matt 14.27.</em> He helped them shift their focus away from fear.<br /><br />When our hearts are focused on Jesus and the promises He has made, fear cannot get a grip on us. In Matt 10 Jesus warned His disciples that they were being sent out as sheep amongst wolves. That doesn't sound safe. And it isn't! They would need wisdom - like that of a serpent and hearts that were pure and harmless like Doves. He also reminded them that the worst that could happen in life was being killed, but God had power to destroy body and soul in Gehenna. The fear of the Lord would keep them from the fear of man; Matt 10.16,28.<br /><br />This is why we see such boldness in the early church. They knew how to walk through doors of opportunity without being intimidated ,either by Rome or the religious leaders of the day. Their hearts were fixed on God and His unfailing promises. Think about all the times in your life where you didn't take a risk to do something your heart told you would advance the Kingdom because of fear. I've been there. I've made that mistake, but I also learned from it. Now I am more determined than ever not to let fear rule when God is opening a door.<br /><br />I used to teach at an International Bible College. One of my students came from Pakistan. He went back to his country and over a ten year period planted over 60 churches. His ministry regularly touches 20,000 people every day. For years he asked me to go and visit him to see what God had accomplished through him and to minister to the saints there. Now Pakistan is not the safest region to visit. Only two flags have been burned in Pakistan in recent history; the Danish flag (where I lived and worked for eight years) and the British flag (my nationality).<br /><br />Eventually I said yes. But in my heart I needed to deal with some fear. I remember saying yes to this assignment even if it meant this was the end for me. I came to the place like Paul where he said, <em>"So now also Christ will be magnified in my body, whether by life or death", Phil 1.20.</em> It was fruitful time. Three hundred came to Christ in one meeting. I spoke every day in many cities. When I came to Islamabad a man came in with a gun to assassinate me. It was all caught on video, I'm not exaggerating. One of the ushers saw him and tackled the gun from him while I was very unceremoniously thrown into a car a driven out of the city!<br /><br />I explained to my host that I was still willing to preach. I really had no fear. He politely told me that they may send others to do the job and if they missed they might harm one of his congregation instead of me!! Fair enough. It was probably the right decision. But think of those three hundred souls in that one meeting who would not have heard about Jesus had I not been obedient; had I not overcome my fear. When we stand and face the enemy God releases His blessing - and we grow in faith.<br /><br />I believe that 2011 is going to be filled with many new doors of opportunity for the church to walk through. As we do we will advance the Kingdom of God. Watch your language. Make sure it builds faith. Check your heart. Make sure it is trusting God and not giving in to fear. Be awake and discerning to the opportunities that are before you; opportunities to serve; to bless; to give; to lead and to speak about Jesus. Every door of opportunity opens up into something new and unexpected. See it as an adventure and dare to go through. Who knows what you will find, accomplish or enable to make happen through that simple step of faith.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-39459040570413260142010-12-13T08:04:00.001-08:002010-12-23T09:01:18.657-08:00Open and Closed Doors<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_g_XaX7t87rE/TROAH46NVMI/AAAAAAAAAPg/5knurCn5bVk/s1600/door%2B2.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 97px; height: 124px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_g_XaX7t87rE/TROAH46NVMI/AAAAAAAAAPg/5knurCn5bVk/s320/door%2B2.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5553923638501921986" /></a><br /><em>These are the words of him who is holy and true, who holds the key of David. What he opens no one can shut, and what he shuts no one can open, Rev 3.7</em><br /><br />In His letter to the church at Philadelphia Jesus presents Himself as the one who holds the Key of David. Whatever else this means, it conveys the idea that He has Kingly authority to open and close doors. This is a powerful metaphor. We all know what a door is. It is the place where we enter or exit a building or room. To those who have the key, entrance is easy; to those who don't, the room or building remains off limits to them.<br /><br />Scripture uses the door as a place where many things were transacted. It was at the gates (doors) of a city that the elders would meet to make important decisions, Ruth 4.11. Likewise the threshold of a doorway held great significance. Jesus reminded the church in Laodicia that He was on the wrong side of the door. They had pushed Him out and He wanted to come back in, Rev 3.20.<br /><br />Doors don't just keep things in, they help to keep things out. In that sense they are a door of protection. We see this in Ex 12 when the Israelites were instructed by Moses to take a lamb less than a year old that had no blemish and to kill it. The blood from this lamb then needed to be applied to the lintel and doorposts of each home. Only by doing this could the firstborn from each family be protected from the angel of death.<br /><br />God's instructions were clear; <em>"And when I see the blood, I will pass over you", Ex 12.13.</em> In other words through their faith and obedience, the life of that innocent lamb counted in place of the eldest born son. Think of the shock and impact this would have on each family. The lamb was taken in on the 10th day of the month. This marked the beginning of months for the Israelites. A new beginning; a new birth. The lamb was kept 'til the 14th of the same month, five days.<br /><br />On the first day it would have been seen by all the children as a cute pet. By day two it would have been named. By day three the children would have argued who should feed it. By day four it was now part of the family. Then on day five the father in each home had to take the lamb and kill it. Imagine the horror on the faces of all the small children. Imagine the protest; "Why must it die?" And then the father must explain that an angel of death will pass through the land that night and if there is no sign of blood on the door then their oldest brother would die.<br /><br />How powerful this picture is. It points forward to Jesus whom John declared to be, <em>"The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world", John 1.49.</em> Like the lamb in the Exodus story Jesus was spotless, innocent and pure. Nothing about His life deserved the death penalty. Yet He willingly gave Himself as a sin offering to save those would trust in Him. For when we believe in Jesus, it's as if we too put the blood on the door posts and lintel of our life. Judgement passes from us and is taken by Jesus. We are safe behind the door, John 10.7.<br /><br />Unlike the lamb in the Exodus story Jesus is a willing victim. Love compelled Him. He surrendered His life in order to give us the opportunity to begin again. It's a compelling story. For all those safe inside the homes, with the blood visible from outside they were protected. The door became a door of security, a door of protection. Death could not cross that threshold. It held no power over those within.<br /><br />This is why the NT takes such a different view on the death of a believer to that of a non-believer. For the believer is said to have passed from death to life; taken out of the kingdom of darkness and placed in the kingdom of God's dear son, Col 1.13 and sealed with the Spirit untill the day of redemption, Eph 1.13. There is now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus, Rom 8.1. Judgement has passed over. They are protected.<br /><br />So the NT language for a believers death is 'falling asleep, John 11.7, 1Thess 4.16. Woody Allen once said; <em>"I don't mind dying, I just don't want to be there when it happens".</em> Clever. Funny! But none of us can escape 'being there'. However for the believer, death is like falling asleep. For when we die we go to be with the Lord, 2 Cor 5.8; Phil 1.23. And we are with Him till the resurrection!<br /><br />This sense of protection was emphasised by Jesus when He sent out His disciples to preach in Matt 10. They were sent out as <em>'Sheep among wolves', Matt 10.16</em>. In other words they were walking into hostile environments. So Jesus encourages them, <em>"And do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. But rather fear Him who is able to destroy both soul and body in Gehenna", Matt 10.28.</em> Finally He reminds them that even the hairs on their head are numbered by the Father in heaven, Matt 10.30. They are watched over, they are protected, they are valued, Matt 10.31.<br /><br />I find this inspiring. I think this truth lies behind the great boldness that the early church demonstrated in its witness. Jesus had removed the sting of death - sin, 1Cor 15.55-56. So they did not live in fear of having to pay the ultimate price for their faith. To use Paul's language; <em>"For me to live is Christ and to die is gain", Phil 1.21.</em> They really did see it as a gain, not a loss. So when brothers or sister died they did not mourn in quite the same way. There was a natural grieving process to go through, but there was also a sense of joy, even victory.<br /><br />This protection extended to God watching over the health of the Israelite nation, provided they learned to walk in His ways and obey His commands, Ex 15.26. They were in covenant relationship with Him and so their deliverance included the promise of health and healing. The Levitical laws prescribed the kind of food to eat, how to prepare it and sanitation rules that ensured good health for the nation. Add to this the rhythm of Sabbath rest and Holy days of celebration, we see a nation that was given a prescription for life that would ensure good health. It was a holistic approach.<br /><br />Much of our treatment of sickness today focuses on symptoms. The Biblical approach always goes to the root of the problem. So in the scriptures healing begins with dealing with the human heart. For out of the heart proceed all the things that lead us into sinful practices. It is this exchange of heart that the new birth promises. With a new heart comes the possibility of re-ordering our lives so that healing can flow into every area; including our relationships.<br /><br />Another important door I want to look at is the door of promise. In Gen 18 we have the account of God meeting with Abraham to confirm His promise of a son. Only this time the meeting is to tell Abraham very specifically when it will happen. Interestingly the meeting takes place at the door of Abraham's tent. He is on the outside eating and talking with the Lord, while Sarah remains the other side of the tent door, but within earshot of all that is being said.<br /><br />Now when she hears the Lord renew His promise to Abraham of a son she laughs; not out loud so she can heard, but within herself, Gen 18.12. It's a mocking laugh. It's a laugh of unbelief. But God heard it. And His response was simply to ask a question; <em>"Is anything to hard for the Lord?"</em> How is it we can believe in a God that has created such a vast universe with the power of His word, but we find it difficult to believe He can intervene in our world; our situation; our need?<br /><br />Rom 4.19-20 tells us that when Abraham heard this promise he was strong in faith. I find it significant that Abraham was one side of the door and his wife was on the other. One side was faith, the other was unbelief. It was the same Lord speaking at the same time to the same couple. But the response of the heart was different for each of them. We could say she was on the wrong side of the door. For the door here represented an entrance into the promise. It simply required faith.<br /><br />What promises has God given you that you have almost given up on? Which side of the door of promise are you? Do you want to stay there? Jesus challenged Thomas not to be faithless but believing. Is anything too hard for the Lord? Can He do what He has promised? Human weakness and frailty does not limit the power of God; only unbelief. Remember it was a burning bush that housed the fire of God, but it did not feed the flame; it housed the flame. <br /><br />This is why Paul could say <em>"We have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us.", 2Cor 4.7 NIV</em> Through our weakness God's strength can shine. This ensures that He alone gets the glory. Faith does not look to human ability before it embraces God's promise, rather it embraces God's promise, even in weakness and boasts in God's power to do what He says.<br /><br />Finally consider the door of provision. In Luke 11.5-8 Jesus tells us the parable of the man who comes to a friend at midnight seeking for bread to give to a late visitor. He is teaching about prayer that releases God's provision. Jesus goes on to tell His disciples to ask, seek and knock. Some doors appear closed, but when we ask the Father in heaven He can open them to us. The point of the parable is that God is eager and willing and we can trust in His nature. When we ask for something good we won't get something bad instead! He knows how to give good things to His children, Luke 11.11-13.<br /><br />Doors of provision require us to knock on them. They will open to us, but not without some perseverance on our part first. God had provision for Israel in the wilderness; but they had to ask for it. Most of the time they complained before they knocked on God's door. Somehow they believed He had brought them there to kill them, Ex 16.3. That's crazy thinking in the light of all He had done for them. The Bible calls this kind of crazy thinking unbelief.<br /><br />The teaching of Jesus in Luke 11 clearly shows that this provision of 'good things' even extends to receiving the Holy Spirit; Luke 11.13; Matt 7.11;. God has all that we need and can supply it when we need it; if we ask! I remember in the eighties some of the controversies surrounding the Holy Spirit and speaking in tongues. People warned me that I might receive a demonic tongue if I opened up in this way. How contrary to the words of Jesus in this parable this is. Our Father in heaven is bigger and better than that. <br /><br />25 years ago I distinctly remember beginning to knock on the door of provision for spiritual gifts. Over the next two years I came into contact with leaders who helped me experience more of the dynamic of the Spirit. The person who probably had the biggest impact on my life in this area was John Wimber. He had what I call a relaxed spirituality. It lacked pentecostal hype. It was down to earth. I could connect with the way he used spiritual gifts and knocking on that door opened up a new level of faith and ministry to me.<br /><br />What area of your life do you feel some lack? Where do you need God to close a door so you can know His protection? Is there a promise that awaits you to move to a different side of the door? Or perhaps you need Him to open a door of provision for you? Asking and knocking are expressions of faith. They position us to walk through doors into new places of freedom, blessing and protection. And if you knock you have the promise of God's word - the door will be opened.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-33601181807586520112010-12-03T09:22:00.000-08:002010-12-06T11:42:09.695-08:00Engraved on the Palms of His Hands<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_g_XaX7t87rE/TP02JBsGYzI/AAAAAAAAAPU/cM8CG7oNqig/s1600/Palms%2B1.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 107px; height: 98px;" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_g_XaX7t87rE/TP02JBsGYzI/AAAAAAAAAPU/cM8CG7oNqig/s320/Palms%2B1.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5547649844690445106" /></a><br />Isaiah 49.13-14 says:<br /><br /><em>Sing O heavens!<br />Be joyful O earth!<br />And break out in singing O mountains!<br />For the Lord has comforted His people<br />And will have mercy on His afflicted.<br /><br />But Zion said, <br />"The Lord has forsaken me,<br />And my Lord has forgotten me"</em><br /><br />What a contrast! God is encouraging praise in the earth because of His commitment to have mercy and comfort His people, but they aren't having any of it. They see it differently. "God has forsaken me. He has forgotten me. I'm abandoned".<br /><br />Have you ever felt like that? Forsaken! Forgotten! Abandoned! What's wrong with this picture? How is that the people of God could be so far from recognising how God truly felt and how committed He is to their well being?<br /><br />In the following verses we have a clue. Isaiah 49 15-16 says:<br /><br /><em>Can a women forget her nursing child, <br />And not have compassion on the son of her womb?<br />Surely they may forget,<br />Yet I will not forget you.<br />See I have engraved you on the palms of My hands;<br />Your walls are continually before Me.</em><br /><br />When the Israelites were taken captive many of them made a print of the walls of Jerusalem. They then had this tattooed on the palm of the hand. It reminded them of their heritage, of what they had lost, of where they hoped to return; one day. God uses this as a powerful metaphor to demonstrate to Israel His love and commitment to them as His people. He is a God of covenant and remains committed to them, despite their failures.<br /><br />This picture points to the New Testament where Jesus bears in His resurrected body the marks that secured our forgiveness. They are a permanent sign to Him and us that we are loved. They are there to inspire faith in us. Jesus invited Thomas to place his fingers in His nail pierced hands and put his hand into the side of Jesus with the comment; "Do not be unbelieving but believing", John 20.27.<br /><br />Isn't it remarkable that we will have perfect bodies in the resurrection but His body will bear a permanent reminder to us of the cost of redemption. We will never forget His deep love for us. But what now? How do we handle the trials of life? What inward posture should we adopt that will help to see us through?<br /><br />I want to show you how some Biblical characters handled life to inspire you in your journey. Let's begin with Sampson. This is a man with great strength physically. From birth he was called to be a Nazarite. No razor came upon his head and his great strength lay in his long hair. But this man also had a weakness, beautiful women. He wasn't very discerning about the kind of women he got involved with.<br /><br />The story of Sampson and Delilah is probably one of the best known in the Bible. Through her continual requests to know the secret of his strength he finally gave in. The Bible says he told her all that was in his heart. What amazes me is that on the first three times that he lied about where his strength lay she had the Philistines lying in wait to attack him. How can you be that stupid? He doesn't seem to connect that she is behind the whole thing. This is a woman who is out to exploit him for money and he is besotted with her. The first blindness that came to him was one of good judgement.<br /><br />Having told her where his strength lies, she shaves his head while he is asleep and he is taken by the Philistines and they blind him. The sad part is that he didn't even recognise that his strength had gone. Having been taken captive by them they then mocked and humiliated him. He was used to entertain them. Imagine how he felt; betrayed, humiliated, alone, forsaken, forgotten.<br /><br />But the Bible makes a small statement that is easy to miss. His hair began to grow back again. This speaks to me. It speaks of the power of redemption, the power of forgiveness, the power of the cross. Hair can be cut, but if the roots remain it will grow back again. Roots are what sustain growth in hair, in trees and plants. They are hidden beneath the surface, but they are what really counts.<br /><br />So despite his great failings in life Sampson believed he could be strong again. Having lost his sight, he regained his vision. The lust of the eyes was what got him into this mess. Now he could see more clearly. His spiritual vision sharpened. Given all he had done wrong he prayed an outrageous prayer. It was full of faith. Sampson relied on one fact; God knew Him, God had called Him and God could be relied on even now to help. Here's his prayer in Judges 16.28:<br /><br /><em>"O Lord God, remember me, I pray! Strengthen me just this once, O God, that I may, with one blow take vengeance on the Philistines for my two eyes!"</em><br /><br />Remember me. And for those who are engraved on the palms of His hands, He cannot forget. Despite our weaknesses and failures, God is faithful. God's power and grace are never limited by human failure and sin. Where sin abounds, grace does much more abound, Rom 5.20.<br /><br />Imagine what was going on in Sampson. They mocked and humiliated him. They used him to entertain them. He had to <em>'perform'</em> for them, Judges 17.25. Not only that, they gave honour to their god Dagon declaring, <em>"Our god has delivered into our hands Sampson our enemy!" Judges 17.23-24.</em> But Sampson believed God was bigger and he dared to ask for strength. <em>'Remember me'</em>. And God did.<br /><br />The sacred text records that Sampson killed more in his death than he did in his life. 20 years of fighting the enemy and his greatest victory is at the end. God remembered. Think of what would have happened if he had just given up; if had resigned himself to a life of constant humiliation and mockery by the enemy; if he had said to himself; "I've blown it, now God can't use me".<br /><br />What failure in life haunts you? What part of your history does the enemy use to mock you? How long will you 'perform' for the enemy before you dare to ask God for strength. God did not answer Sampson's prayer because he deserved it. He answered it because of His grace. He remembered this man and Sampson ended his life a hero.<br /><br />Notice that Sampson did not look for an easy way out. He knows it will cost him his life. Listen to his last words in Judges 16.30, <em>"Let me die with the Philistines!" </em> Yet his final resting place is in Israel, in his father's tomb. Through sin his life was cut short but through God's gracious remembrance he defeated the enemy, silenced their mocking and showed that their god was no god at all. No wonder Heb 11.32 cites him as a man of faith.<br /><br />Let's turn to Hannah; a women in deep distress because she is childless. Not only that, there is another wife who mocks her and a husband who does not understand her pain, <em>"Am I not better to you than ten sons?"</em> Doesn't that sound a tad egocentric? Not put off, she goes to God in prayer. The heart of it is, "Remember me", 1Sam 1.11. She is ready to act, but she needs God to act first. And He does. He remembers Hannah. He answers her prayer. She gets a son and God gets a young man dedicated to Him. Win win.<br /><br />Unlike Sampson, Hannah had done nothing wrong. She was a godly woman; a prayerful woman; a righteous woman. In her pain and distress of wanting a son she came to a realisation. Maybe God wanted something too. She may not have known how bad Eli's sons were or God's plan to judge his house, but she intuitively felt that God needed her to surrender this child back to Him. So she promised to give him in service to God. It was another amazing act of faith. In the end she was blessed with three more sons and two daughters, 1Sam 2.21. God is no mans debtor.<br /><br />What need is there in your life that you feel desperate about? Are you praying to have that need met? Maybe, like Hannah, you need to ask with a view to giving it back to God. The problem so often with what we receive is that it becomes 'ours'. And our possessions can eventually possess us. Hannah's prayer included a promise to give back to God what He gave. This released God's provision for her. In her pain; in her need; in her frustration, she discerned something of the purpose of God and He remembered her.<br /><br />Finally think of the Thief on the Cross in Luke 23.42. We know nothing of his background. Was he a good man who went bad? Was he someone who hit on hard times? Was he simply a bad person all his life? We don't know. What we do know is that when the other thief began to berate Jesus, this man spoke up. His conscience was sensitive to the fact that Jesus had done nothing to deserve death. He knew Jesus was righteous. Not only that, he knew that he and the other thief both deserved their punishment. They were indeed guilty. <br /><br />While defending Jesus and admitting his own guilt he dares to say something to Jesus as they both hang there - soon to die, <em>"Lord, remember me when You come into Your Kingdom".</em> Jesus answer shows it's never too late. Dying prayers can still change destinies when the grace of God is at work. Sampson, Hannah, the thief with no name. All of them with a deep need. All of them in anguish. All of them prayed. All of them asked, 'Remember me'. All of them received an answer.<br /><br />Each one of these Biblical characters teaches us something. No matter where we are coming from in life, God is ready to act on behalf of those whose hearts turn towards Him. He remembers, for we are engraved on the palms of His hands. Remember that next time you are tempted to give up. It isn't over 'til it all over. Faith has the capacity to write an epilogue, just when you think the story is finished.<br /><br />If God is telling us to break out into singing, perhaps, despite our perspective, He knows something we have yet to learn. He is truly, madly and deeply committed to us as His people. And Jesus bears in His hands the proof of that love. How can He ever truly forget?Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9089553370456516531.post-69909794310395884552010-11-23T08:08:00.000-08:002010-11-26T02:17:19.234-08:00The Book of Remembrance<a href="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_g_XaX7t87rE/TO158j_tT7I/AAAAAAAAAPM/haIl7FX371I/s1600/scroll%2B1.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 119px; height: 150px;" src="http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_g_XaX7t87rE/TO158j_tT7I/AAAAAAAAAPM/haIl7FX371I/s320/scroll%2B1.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5543220797724512178" /></a><br />Journaling is a long established tradition that has a new following today. We are encouraged to write our thoughts and impressions about what has impacted us for that day and then reflect on them at a later time. It is a good discipline pursued by many. Well God is into journaling too. The only difference is that His journal is a record of overheard conversations that people have about Him. It's called the Book of Remembrance. Take a look at Malachi 3.16.<br /><br /><em>Then those who feared the Lord spoke to one another,<br />And the Lord listened and heard them;<br />So a book of remembrance was written before Him<br />For those who fear the Lord<br />And who meditate on His name.</em><br /><br />This little verse captures my imagination. The Hebrew word for listened implies that what was said caught God's attention. Sometimes I find myself in the Hub coffee shop. It's packed with people eating, drinking and talking. Conversations and exchanges going on all around me as I try to focus on writing. But then I hear something that peaks my interest. Someone starts to comment about the atmosphere of our church coffee shop, the friendly staff, the brilliant Fun Tots program for mothers with children under five.<br /><br />As casually as possible I listen in. You see they are speaking about something I am personally interested in and committed to. The subject matter gets my attention. This is similar to what is happening in Malachi. There are some kinds of conversations that grab God's attention and He listens in. Now I understand about God's omnipresence and that at one level He hears all things that men say. But here we are talking about something different. Not only does He hear in the sense that He knows, He hears in the sense that He responds.<br /><br />The text goes even further. The Hebrew behind the word 'heard' is 'Shama'. It is used often in the book of Deuteronomy and is well known by all Jews as a title for <em>Deut 6.4; "Hear O Israel, the Lord our God the Lord is One".</em> In many of the instances it is used in Deuteronomy there is an implicit expectation that the people will hear and respond or act in obedience to what God is asking of them. To 'shama' the Lord is to respond and obey Him.<br /><br />It is this word that is used to describe God hearing the conversations of those who honour Him. In other words He hears and acts on what is said by them and it is all recorded in a scroll or book. He makes a permanent record. Interestingly this book is 'written before Him'. It is literally written in His presence. God doesn't send one of His servants away to make the record, He commands the book to be written before Him, in front of Him, right where He is! That's impressive.<br /><br />So what is it that is said that captures the Lord's attention? Whilst we are not told the content of what is said we do know a number of things about the people speaking.<br /><br />1. Twice in the text we are told that the people who spoke <em>'feared the Lord'</em>. This is a common way of referring to the honour that believers had towards God. They held Him in great honour. Now in the days of Malachi this was a big issue. One of God's complaints against the people in this book was the way that they dishonoured Him, especially when it came to sacrifices and offerings. God was a great King and deserved the best. Those who brought an offering were meant to bring from the best of their flocks and herds.<br /><br />But the people of Malachi's day on the whole didn't do that. They came to worship but they brought an inferior offering; animals that were lame, blind, stolen or disfigured in some way. Their actions revealed an attitude of heart. They did not truly value and honour the Lord, Mal 1.6-8, 13-14. They went through the motions but it lacked truth and sincerity of heart. And God saw it. Further they were marrying foreign women and taking on their religious practices while others were disloyal to their marriage partners, Mal 2.10-14. Finally they kept back their tithes and offerings from God, Mal 3.8-9. <br /><br />Their lives and their worship were a sham. But in the midst of all this hypocrisy there were a group of people who loved and honoured the Lord. These people worshipped God in spirit and in truth. They were genuine. Our text goes on to say they 'meditated' on His name. The Hebrew word includes these meanings, to esteem, to regard, to reckon upon, to think about and to value. It shows their attitude of heart. This ability to put God first gave them great boldness to speak about Him, in a context were most people didn't want to listen.<br /><br />2. The text tells us they spoke to one another. But the word translated 'another' is translated as 'neighbour' 102 times; 'friend' 42 times and 'another' 23 times. This implies that there was a missional dimension to their speaking as a well as a fellowship dimension. With believers they were edifying one another; with those who were not truly walking with God they were witnessing.<br /><br />Consider the apostles in Acts 4.15-20. They were strictly warned not to speak about Jesus after they healed a lame man. But Peter's response is telling. He is full of boldness and declares; <em>"We cannot but speak the things we have seen and heard".</em> Notice that his testimony came out of his personal experience of what he had 'seen and heard'. It was first hand. It was genuine. It was real and he couldn't stop talking about it.<br /><br />Christian's don't need to be compelled to do evangelism. They need an encounter with God that leaves them changed. That's what Peter had. That's what the woman at the well had. That's what the man born blind had. They could not help but speak about an event that was so life changing for each of them. It flowed out of them. This is why the enemy tries to intimidate believers. Anything so that they don't tell their story. But our stories are one of our most powerful weapons. It is the word of our testimony that helps to overcome the dragon, satan, Rev 12.11.<br /><br />The Holy Spirit has been given to us that we might speak about Jesus, boldly, fearlessly, proudly. In Acts 5.17-32 we have another account of the apostles. This time they were arrested and thrown in prison. But an Angel of the Lord released them with this command, <em>"Go stand in the temple and speak to the people all the words of this life", Acts 5.20.</em> Amazing. Released in order to speak about this life, about Jesus, the way the truth and the life, John 14.6.<br /><br />Notice <em>Acts 2.40; "And with many other words he testified and exhorted them....." </em> Peter is speaking to neighbours and friends and other believers about Jesus. It had an impact. The church grew. Lives were changed. God was honoured. It is this kind of speaking that gets God's attention. This is what He has recorded in a Book of Remembrance.<br /><br />3. Finally these people met together. It was intentional. They were intentional about meeting their neighbours. They were intentional about meeting their friends. They were intentional about meeting one another. Acts 2.42-47 shows that the early disciples met together daily, in public places where they could witness and house to house where they could share food, prayer and fellowship. The temptation when we come under pressure is to cut out things from our schedule. But many times these choices are driven by expediency rather than destiny or purpose. And so we often cut out the wrong things.<br /><br /><em>Heb 10.24-25 says; "And let us consider one another in order to stir up love and good works, not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together as is the manner of some, but exhorting one another and so much more as you see the Day approaching".</em><br /><br />To forsake something is to leave it behind. Intentionally meeting together with others who provoke you to be better and do better is never a bad thing. Just as gifts must be stirred up so must love and good works and that happens through relationships. More specifically through relationships where we speak words of encouragement. And when we do God leans in, listens and acts on our behalf recording all the details in His book.<br /><br />The 'Day' spoken of here in Hebrews is the 'Day of the Lord', the return of Jesus. Each day we draw closer to that event. The writer to Hebrews tell us to meet and talk more as we see that 'Day' approaching. When I was at school we often played 'I dare you'. The idea was to think of something that required some act of courage and then dare a friend to do it. Of course as teenagers we often did stupid things. But as believers we too can dare each other to do more and go further for God. Barnabas encouraged Paul, Paul encouraged Timothy, Moses encouraged Joshua and Jesus encouraged the twelve.<br /><br />Who are you speaking to about what God has done in your life? Who are you doing life with and daring them to do more for God? Who in your life provokes you to want to live more radically for Jesus? Do your conversations reflect the reality of Jesus in your life?<br /><br />Two years ago I was in Calcutta looking into the room where Mother Teresa slept for many years and visiting the orphanage she began. The room contained nothing but a bed a table and a small shelf. I spent an hour playing with many of the abandoned children at the orphanage. I was provoked, stirred, challenged. Like other occasions I've had, it made me want to make my life count. Though dead, her life was speaking to me that day. She penned these words in her personal diary, <em>"I want nothing for myself, I want everything for Jesus".</em> I was touched. I wept.<br /><br />Let me encourage you to speak words to others and live life in a way that will take people closer to Jesus. God will take note and make a record of it in His Book of Remembrance. I suspect that one day the Lord will read out all the things you said that impressed Him, Rev 20.12. And on that day, all of heaven will know the impact your life has made on others. What a wonderful thought. Be purposeful with your words. Let them flow out of your devotional life and encounters with God. And in your heart remember that God is there too, recording what you say so that He can reward you.Peter Protherohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10852257658760208504noreply@blogger.com